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ABC’s of costs

Jeremy M. Lazarus | 4/5/2019, 6 a.m.
The administration of Mayor Levar M. Stoney insists that the contracts awarded to build three new city schools “are reflective ...
Mayor Levar Stoney

Jason Kamras

Jason Kamras

Thomas E. “Tommy” Kranz

Thomas E. “Tommy” Kranz

The administration of Mayor Levar M. Stoney insists that the contracts awarded to build three new city schools “are reflective of the best possible prices given the scope of the work and the current market conditions.”

The administration is mounting that defense in response to questions from four Richmond School Board members who are shocked at the $30 million hike in price for two new elementary schools, George Mason and Greene, and a new middle school to replace Elkhardt-Thompson Middle School.

The Free Press first brought the projected 27 percent price hike to public attention in the March 21-23 edition, sparking questions from board members Felicia Cosby, Kenya Gibson, Dr. Patrick Sapini and Jonathan Young.

Despite offering a detailed defense, the administration has yet to explain why other school divisions, most notably neighboring Chesterfield County, can build schools for significantly less than Richmond is spending.

In a five-page response to the School Board members, city Procurement Director Betty J. Burrell and interim Chief Capital Projects Manager Robert Stone stated that construction costs for schools has far outpaced the general increase in inflation.

Ms. Burrell and Mr. Stone stated that state data on school construction show that building costs are 80 percent higher than in 2009-2010.

That 80 percent increase compares to the 15 percent increase since 2010 in the consumer price index, the measure the government uses to determine the pace of inflation.

That spike in cost, along with other factors, such as a School Board demand that the schools be built and opened by the fall of 2020, explains why the projected cost to build the three schools has grown to $140 million, up from the $110 million estimate the School Board received, according to the letter.

Former interim Richmond Public Schools Superintendent Thomas E. “Tommy” Kranz finds that explanation credible. He produced the original estimate.

While irked that city and school officials have been pointing the finger of blame at him for supposedly botching the estimates, Mr. Kranz said there is no question that costs are surging.

An expert in the field, Mr. Kranz said a top contractor he consulted told him that the cost of school construction has risen 15 percent since 2016 and is projected to climb another 4 percent to 6 percent this year and next year — far faster than could have been anticipated.

Mr. Kranz said the driving forces include President Trump’s trade wars and tariffs that have led to a spike in the cost of steel and a construction boom that has made it harder to find available subcontractors and workers.

Still Mr. Kranz said that Mr. Young is right that there should be concern when a neighboring school district like Chesterfield is spending less money for a similar school.

Take for example Chesterfield’s new Enon Elementary School that opened in January. According to the county, the total cost for the school to serve 794 students was $28.6 million, or $313.33 a square foot, when all costs — from design to demolition of the old building — are included.

That’s about $6 million less than Richmond is planning to spend for the new 750-student George Mason Elementary, which is projected to cost $35.7 million, or $357 per square foot.

One key reason is that Chesterfield appears to more closely monitor the square footage in a bid to stretch its money. At Enon, the building provides 115 square feet per student. That compares with the more generous 133.29 square feet that Richmond plans to provide per student at George Mason.

Another example involves Richmond’s proposed new middle school, which is designed to have 187,200 square feet. That would provide nearly 125 square feet for each of the 1,500 students who are to attend.

Limiting the space per student to 115 square feet — a change that largely would go unnoticed by occupants — would shave nearly $5 million from the cost.

The design cost for the three schools also is up. While Ms. Burrell and Mr. Stone noted that the total design cost had been cut by $2.8 million from the original estimate of $8.9 million to $5.91 million, that is still $1.1 million more than the $14.8 million Richmond spent on architects when it built two new elementary schools and one new middle school a few years ago. And those schools were custom designed; these new schools are recycled designs of schools that Suffolk previously built.

Richmond also has boosted the cost of construction by insisting on having the three schools built to the U.S. Green Building Council’s Silver Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), even though the council, itself, has acknowledged that those using its models often do not reap the projected savings in energy and operating costs that the extra work is supposed to produce.

In their letter, Ms. Burrell and Mr. Stone noted that the cost increase had caught everyone’s attention. Ms. Burrell and Mr. Stone claimed that the School Board rejected the city’s plan to spend $200,000 to engage a third party to evaluate the costs of the schools.

Ms. Gibson said that claim does not correspond with the facts. “Their letter notes the board declined to proceed with a third-party estimate, when in fact, (the board) approved the project in September,” she stated.

Three months later, according to the record of the Dec. 4 School Board meeting, Superintendent Jason Kamras told the board he had dropped the idea of bringing in a outside party because the cost had increased to $200,000. The board accepted the explanation, but did not take a vote.