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Waterford Street School Explained on WGAW – Gardner MA Mayor Michael Nicholson
The Mayor stated, “I’d rather get the information out there correctly than have someone read something wrong on Facebook.”
Regarding the $550,000 approved by the Gardner City Council, WGAW host Steve Wendell asked, “What’s that money going to be used for?” Mayor Nicholson responded, “It’s renovations for the building. It’s things like new HVAC systems. It’s things like handicapped ramps in the building. No room in that building had light switches. Every room had their own individual circuit breaker that you had to go and flip the breaker in order to turn lights on in the room…so it’s fixing that now because that’s not currently up to code..”
The announcement to turn Waterford Street School in to a Community Center was made in October 2022. Read original article, CLICK HERE.
Mayor Nicholson also stated, “I think what people have to realize is we stopped using it as a school for a reason, and it’s because there was just a lot of work that needed to be done in it that didn’t meet the needs of our students. Now the building’s bones are good, but there’s a lot of work that needs to be done. There’s plumbing work, there’s electrical upgrades, there’s flooring work, there’s ramps, work to get the building ADA compliant which is currently isn’t. So that funding is going towards that work there.” The mayor also spoke about other funding. “We did receive 400 thousand dollars from the Commonwealth through an earmark in the state budget that Representative Zlotnik was able to include in last year’s budget. So it’s all just part of the work. The roof needs to be replaced at some point, or at least some patching for some leaks that we have there if we’re going to make it the center that we want to have at the City. And we’re not gonna have a situation like the Greenwood Pool where nothing was done to that building for so long, that we didn’t invest in it that it’s now falling in on itself. We have to make that investment in that building, and we have to do it now.”
The Mayor affirmed that the money is not going to pay GAAMHA for what GAAMHA had already put in to the building. As far as selling the building, the Mayor stated, “We have to put it out to bid, just like we do any other time we lease or sell land. So we can do a license agreement, but a long-term lease is what we’re looking for. That does have to go out to bid, just like anything else does. It would be an RFP process. It’s a very public process every step of the way.”
Regarding the delay the Mayor stated, “We do have to go to the state for them to ratify the city’s decision to no longer have it as a school building, but as a municipal building. Under the Public Land Protection Act. That is something that is required every time a school building is changed from educational to general municipal purpose, the legislature just has to ratify that decision.” The Mayor explained that similar approval is needed for Helen Mae Sauter School and any time use changes from educational to general municipal.
Regarding renting Waterford, the Mayor stated, “If we rent the building now, we’re going to get a dime, put this investment in it, we’re going to get a dollar. You really get what you pay for. Projected tenants are GAAMHA, Growing Places, the Gardner Senior Center, and the Gardner CAC.
More information: City Council Meeting at which funding was approved, AUDIO and article, CLICK HERE —- original announcement from October 2022 with AUDIO and article, CLICK HERE.