No school on Stevenson property

The school district recently came to a mutual agreement with Lou Stevenson’s heirs to purchase the Stevenson property for a new school. - File Photo
File Photo
The school district recently came to a mutual agreement with Lou Stevenson’s heirs to purchase the Stevenson property for a new school.

By MARY L. GRADY
Mercer Island Reporter Editor
March 23, 2012 · Updated 12:04 PM 

At the Mercer Island School District Board of Directors meeting held last evening, Schools superintendent Gary Plano announced that the school district will not pursue constructing a school on the five-acre Stevenson property. After a meeting last week with 100 neighbors from around the parcel, school district administrators heard loud and clear that a school would not be welcome there.

District administrators had moved to purchase the Stevenson's land as it is one of the last large undeveloped parcels on the Island. They saw purchasing the land. The intent was to either build a school there or to 'bank' as an asset that could be used toward acquiring land at another location. Both board members and the superintendent agreed that if an additional school was to be built, a north-end property would be best. The body pledged to work with the city to find a suitable site for the future.

Plano said he did not expect the amount of ' push back' from residents around the Stevenson land which has been unoccupied save a few horses, for years. Their concerns were centered mostly around the amount of traffic a school would generate.

Board member Brian Emanuels was also surprised by the response to a possible school at the site. "It would be hard to proceed," he said, "with the amount of opposition there.

The school board has signed an agreement with the Stevenson heirs to purchase the 5 acres by August of 2013. The property would be paid for with proceeds from the upcoming bond issue.

Plano also announced that the school district will also continue to be open to working with the Redeemer Lutheran Church and a possible acquisition of their land. If such a purchase was to be made, the school district would commit to an arrangement to let the congregation remain on the land.

With that topic set aside, Plano said that the board should move ahead to focus on the first item on school rebuilding plan which is the design and reconstruction of Island Park Elementary School.

 

Contact Mercer Island Reporter Editor Mary L. Grady at editor@mi-reporter.com or (206) 232-1215 ext. 1050.

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