Future Arlington school projects jeopardized by dwindling funds

Arlington Public Schools has spent hundreds of millions of dollars reconstructing two high schools, but funds are in jeopardy of drying up before the county’s third and lowest-income-area high school gets a makeover.

Arlington County Manager Ron Carlee has indicated the county will cap the amount of money schools can finance through bonds, saying Arlington’s debt will reach a perilously high level unless the county and the schools curb their construction rates.

Arlington just finished the $105 million, bond-financed overhaul of Washington-Lee High School — the most expensive high school construction project in Virginia history.

Yorktown High, which already has undergone $25 million of reconstruction, is scheduled for a $75 million second-phase overhaul this year.

The County School Board has said that Wakefield High — the South Arlington high school with a greater proportion of low-income children than the other two — is next on the priority list.

The project is expected to surpass the other two, costing an estimated $150 million, partially due to escalating construction prices.

Thomas Jefferson Middle School and the Arlington Career Center also have long been listed as needing significant improvements.

But according to a January memo from Carlee, the schools likely will be limited to between $34 million and $56 million in bond financing this cycle to keep the county’s debt at a tenable level.

The schools would be kept to a similar amount during the 2010 and 2012 bond cycles.

With those constraints, whether the schools would be able to start any projects outside the $75 million Yorktown renovation remains uncertain.

“I think it’s clear that our needs exceed our resources,” School Board Chairman Ed Fendley said. “I do think it’s going to be a tough couple of years — I think that much is apparent. We have yet to hear from our community and to work out a plan for what would be best.”

County and schools officials are scheduled to release their respective capital improvement plans in May.

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