Saturday, October 20, 2018

The dogs of summer

Just a couple of quick pics. Amy and Andy, having a great summer.

Rolling in the grass, probably because some coyote happened to shit there. 

And, on the job, looking for geese from the canoe:

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Talking about coyotes

Was talking with some neighbors about coyotes. One expressed a desire to just shoot 'em. That gave me a thought.

Let me tell you the tale of two farms. These are real people, btw. Farm #1 has sheep and other critters, and is in the middle of a bunch of coyotes, but has no problems with coyote predation, or generally even coyotes coming on the farm property. Farm #2 sees coyotes on the farm on a regular basis, and knows they are there even when not seen. Farm #2 has only geese and chickens at this time. Farm #1 practices a non-confrontational coyote harassment habit. Meaning farmer and DOGS walk the perimeter on a regular basis. Dog / coyote confrontation, though, is avoided. Other harassment techniques are employed - like air horns on sighting. The coyotes stay off farmer #1's property. Farmer #2 shoots coyotes when she sees them. They still come on the property at will.

That's anecdotal, but what conclusions would you reach, based on these two people?

Saturday, October 13, 2018

That'll do, Amy. Good job!

Winter's coming. Boo, hiss. Getting dark early. It's been raining so much I feel like we're in Seattle.

Dogs keep jonesin' for more running. We've had geese at one schoolyard the past 3 days, so they've gotten a little something to do. Today the skies finally cleared some at about dusk, and shortly after, Andy came bugging me to do something. So I got out the winter blinky lights, put one on each of us, and took them on their run in the pitch dark. The stars finally came out towards the end of the run, and I could clearly see the big dipper. Lovely! And Amy and Andy are much more relaxed now!

Speaking of Amy - she did a great job moving the geese this morning. They were evading us in a small pond. It took her a few false starts, but Amy finally went swimming to push them out! So proud of her!

Andy went with the geese to make sure they kept moving. Amy is still not a very good swimmer, but as soon as she got back to shore, she took off after the geese as well. About a hundred yards or so down the field she caught up with Andy, and he started doing his bossy routine - to stop Amy from going with the geese. I gave him loud "NO"s, and "STOP", but he was focused. So they started in with each other! I think maybe she gave him some righteous bitch fury, and it would be well-deserved! Of course, I had told them "STOP", and come, all that. I was walking toward them to get them both back on focus. One of them kept stopping the other in their tracks, not allowing any forward motion. At first, I thought it was Andy, because that is what he does (and he's not supposed to). But as I got closer, I could just see that it was a red collar doing the stopping! That's Amy!

Well, good on her if she finally gave him a little what-for. She's been mostly submissive to his bossiness, but she is the better herder, by a bit. I often won't release them at the same time, to prevent just such behavior. Anyway, I was proud of Amy, she did good.

Also, because she got up the grit to go in the pond to move the geese, we didn't have to drive all the home and back. I hadn't planned this check, and I didn't have the radio-boat in the car. If she hadn't gone swimming, we would have had to fetch the boat!

Friday, March 16, 2018

A NO vote on the new Hildreth school


Why I will be voting NO on the new elementary school.


The whole discussion about the new school project can be broken down to two points. First, how many bells and whistles should we include in the project. Second, who should make the decision about what bells and whistles the town wants to pay for. The needs for the K-wing are extensive. For the 1988 building they are much smaller - including mostly code upgrades and an improved roof. The wants include improvements to the cafeteria and gym, significant interior reconfiguration for administrative office space, and changes to the interior configuration of classroom space.

I believe in spending good money to take care of real problems. I like my tools, and my things, to last. Fix what needs fixing, and do it right. But don’t mortgage the farm for something you can’t afford. That's what my grandparents taught. I like to see the town share those practical, traditional values.

The school building committee (SBC) took it upon themselves to include in this project a number of items that are desirable, at an additional cost. The result is a very costly project that includes more than is needed to fix the problems.

The committee took the four original proposals and whittled them down to two. The two proposals that were brought forward, one renovation, and the new building, both contained significant expenditures on “want” items. And at that point, the public debate centered around those two options, as though they were what we had to choose from, although they weren’t. When the SBC chose one project to bring to the town vote, they chose the most extravagant of those available.

I am opposing this project on two counts. First, I believe it contains more bells and whistles than we, as a town, want to spend for this purpose. Second, I think the citizens, not the committee, should have been the ones to make the decision about which bells and whistles to include, if any. In spite of efforts to minimize the risk such a large expenditure means, there are very real risks. 

Before I go on, a couple of bio notes on why I have some expertise on this topic.  I spent 15 of my career years in project controls for major infrastructure construction. The first six years of that time was in project cost control on a school capital improvement program in Memphis, TN. We were the project management team. That school project oversaw more than $500M in school renovations and construction, some 27 projects, if memory serves. For five of those years, I was the senior cost engineer –the guy who tracked and watched over project costs.

History of the Project

Many among us are not aware of the full history of this project. In 2014 the town had engineers and architects look at our elementary school buildings in order to make recommendations on action, and give an estimate. The end result was a renovation estimate for the K-wing, with construction of an additional building, for a cost of $4.6M. That renovation included complete abatement of the mold issues. The school supervisory personnel never followed through to carry this forward, so it died. To be replaced by a much larger and more expensive project.

In 2016, a new project was brought to life. This project started with the demolition of the K-wing as a minimum. Renovation of the K-wing was no longer in consideration. The initial estimates came in with the simplest estimate (“needs” only), which included a new building to replace the K-wing, at $11M. The next step up, a simple renovation plus a cafeteria upgrade, came in under $20M. That was total cost to the town.

Now, in my professional opinion, based on my experience in the field, I don’t particularly have issues with subsequent estimates coming in somewhat higher. And they rapidly did. Those low end, “focus on needs” estimates quickly went up to $16 and $19M. In the next few weeks and months, they went up higher still. When estimates double, and then more than double in size, it is a warning sign that either you have an incompetent estimator, or you have changed the ground rules for the estimate. And, indeed, “wanted” items were being moved into the “need focused” estimates. The low end estimates were quickly discarded, and the subsequent focus was on expensive projects that also bought items the school administration wanted.

Needed Fixes, Triggers, and Bells and Whistles

That brings us up to today, and the current decision, because one of the problems being experienced, and the justification for a new building, are the roof problems in the 1988 building. In a nutshell, ice dams. There are other considerations in the 1988 building that are also needful, such as an update to the heating system.

The K-wing is from the 1950's, and it has major issues on several fronts. The primary need for attention is the presence of mold, due to roof leaks (also due to ice dams and snow removal issues). This problem needs to be fixed, and it is the primary driver why all these changes are being looked at now. There are numerous other issues in the K-wing that are truly needful. The K-wing needs major work. For more information about the condition of the K-wing, see the 2014 report: “Investigative & Assessment Report for Harvard Public Schools – Hildreth Elementary School – K-Wing, Blackstone Block Architects” (linked in the reference section).

Then, there are triggered items that need to be fixed, by law, when you fix the needed items. An example is ADA compliance. Then there are bells and whistles. These are items the school administration wants.

Those changes include work on the gym, the cafeteria, internal classroom redesigns, and additional office space. They represent investment beyond what is required to fix the problems in the school buildings.


So then the question becomes how much do we need, and how badly do we want the proposed changes. There are pro arguments, for a new gym and new cafeteria, but I have to observe that the school supervision has been working with the current gym and cafeteria for decades, and that situation has been manageable.

You might ask if the changes are needed due to an increase in student enrollment, or overcrowding in the existing school. Our school population has been on a decrease over the past decade. Current forecasts do not predict a significant change from this. We don’t have overcrowding. School management stated, at a building project public meeting, that we already have very good pupil/teacher ratios in class size.

What the committee brought forward in this process of renovate or build new was the most expensive renovation option vs a new building. They included all kinds of changes above and beyond what was necessary to just fix the problems that exist. They voted, 9 to 1, to offer the citizens of Harvard only two options. Either a YES vote to a very large capital expenditure or a NO vote with the uncertainty of results that will entail. That bothers me.

The Building Quality of the 1988 Structure, and Suitability to Needs

One of the major pro-new arguments being bandied about is the projected lifetime of a renovation to the 1988 building. Another question has been to ask how sound the 1988 building is. In the late 1980’s, the town of Harvard had two buildings for the elementary school. One was what is now called the K-wing, and the other was a wooden school building called the Brown School, dating to 1905. The town voted to tear down the Brown School, and build a new structure. The architect of that building designed a structure face that reflected the old Bromfield school (now the Harvard Public Library), and the old library. The 1987 school projects were a major capital expenditure, and as a result met with controversy. Some compromises were made in the design to reduce the cost. One change that was discussed, but decided against, was changes to the roof design to reduce cost. Some people, in Nextdoor comments, have indicated they believe the original roof was a compromise. But according to the Harvard Post reporting, the town did NOT compromise on the roof design or structure. [1]

To be honest, the answers that I see, that the renovation of the 1988 building is risky, and that it was a poorly constructed building in the first place, give me heartburn. The questions are good questions. The answers some are providing are not good answers. They are products of misinformation – logical fallacies.

Is the 1988 building sound? One of the early moves made by the building committee, and a proper move, was to order a wall penetration study be done to assess the unseen damage inside the walls. Engineers came to the school, made several observation penetrations at interior sites where it looked like they might expect damage to occur. Town members looked at what they uncovered. What they found was very little damage. What is important about this is that the interior condition of the walls is not an unknown. Some people arguing pro would have us believe that renovation is highly risky because “anything can be found when you open a wall.” This is a scare tactic, predicting unrealistic consequences. Frankly, given the results of the penetration testing, this is the least of my worries. The 1988 building is basically still sound – it still has “good bones”. This was affirmed at the public meetings the school building committee held last year.

Another scare tactic that has been used is saying that, should we renovate, we will have to repeat whatever we fix, within, say 20 years. Think about this argument for a minute. The current roof has been in place for 30 years, and is still sound. It has some leakage issues as a result of ice dams. So presuming that a renovation would only last 20 years sounds far-fetched, doesn’t it? This is an exaggeration of the risk factors involved. Frankly, even new construction contains risk. Take, for example, our new police station. We’ve already taken the constructors of that project to court over HVAC issues. And we have already had to spend thousands of dollars replacing components that we should not have had to replace.

The 1988 building is sound and is serving the school well enough. I recognize that some things would be nice to have, but “nice to have” and needful are different things.

School Ranking

We have, today, a school that gets exceptionally high ratings. It rates a 10 on GreatSchools.org. The Harvard Public School system is ranked by Boston Magazine in the top 10 of 125 school districts that lie within, or partially within, I-495. And I know these are references that prospective home-buyers use for research: 10 years ago I was such a buyer, and Great Schools was the website I used to research communities. Boston Magazine has been described by other residents as the gold standard for school rankings in Massachusetts. By pretty much any measure, Hildreth ranks highly. Are these changes going to improve those school ratings? When you have a score of 10 out of 10, how do you improve it? Answer? You can’t.

Property Values

The arguments in favor of a new HES sometimes try to convince us that our property values will improve as a result of the construction. Those arguments are deeply flawed. If anything, the argument that this level of spending creates a risk of lowering our home values has better logic. 

One "pro" argument quotes statistics equating increases in school spending with an increase in home values. It just doesn't work that way. This is the logical fallacy known as the “Gambler’s Fallacy”. In case you don’t remember your first semester in statistics (or you never took it), the example frequently given uses a coin toss question. “If you toss a coin 9 times, and it turns up heads each time, on the tenth toss, what are the odds that the coin will turn up tails?” And the answer is? It’s still 50/50. There is no trick involved. The statistical average or likelihood does not apply to the individual case. So saying "statistics say" doesn't apply, because we are a single point among the many that made up the calculation of those statistics, and our unique circumstances are what will dictate property value.

In our case, we have a town where our schools are already ranked very highly, and a town where the average spending per pupil has historically been high. The likelihood that a large increase in spending on the school will be reflected in home values is small. We who are already citizens might know the difference between a new school and an old one, but home-buyers from out of town won’t.
Additionally, the obverse is also not true. If we only fix the problems, we won’t be hurting home values. The school building is what it is, and has been so for decades. 

On the other hand, an increase in property taxes creates a very real risk of a decrease in property values. So, projecting an increase in home value is possible, just as anything is possible. But I find it exceedingly unlikely.

Project Cost for Needs Only Fixes

There has been a number calculated ($28M) of what our town would spend on a renovation-only school project. I doubt the validity of that number for several reasons.

First, it was “backed out” of an estimate that already contained a number of the “wants” – the improvements. You can not cleanly do this with an estimate.

Second, it is more than twice what the early estimates were – and more than 50% larger than the first revisions of those schematic estimates. As I mentioned previously, I don’t have an issue with an estimate going up as you get into the detail, but when it goes up as much as this, it is an indication that either the original was incompetent, or the work description changed. 

Third, there is a procedure for staying in the MSBA (the state funding) “loop” should the SBC project (the new school) get voted down. Voting "NO" does not mean we automatically lose the state funding. Other districts have gotten voted down, continued with the process, and gotten MSBA funding. And, to be fair, some have not. 

If we go with the new school, I am not confident that the new school cost will not go up again. Most recently, the BOS stated $54M as a not to exceed, but the current estimate is at $52M (since I first wrote this, the announced estimate has already gone up another $1.8M to $53.8M). It sounds to me like the BOS are not confident the cost will not go up – again. But let’s stick with the current numbers for a minute. Given the current estimate, the town will be spending $35M. That represents $7M more than the projected $28M “If we do it all ourselves” number. And that $7M difference could help cover other capital costs that we, the town of Harvard, know are coming soon.

Town Money Needs

Harvard has more capital expenditure requirements in the future. We can’t be considering the elementary school in a vacuum and also be considering our needs wisely. So let’s take a look at the spending vs needs. What possible major capital expenditures could come up in the next few years? Keep in mind, these expenses are very likely to happen, but they are NOT on the current list of projects in our capital spending plans!

Fire trucks have come into the town conversation recently. And moving, perhaps building new, the town fire station. The Council on Aging is another area where we are expecting capital spending. And the Conservation Commission is looking at short funds, so they are already looking for more town funding. This is just what I can think of.

What happens if we go all out for the new elementary school? Then we risk ignoring these other capital expenditure needs, or we raise taxes again.

Conclusion

In one meeting, as we discussed the topic, a citizen applied the description “Cadillac” to the new school. Others then argued that it isn’t “a Cadillac”, and one even called it a “Toyota”. Ok, fine, whatever. But let me ask you this: what do you call something when it has bells and whistles?

No one here is arguing to make our schools a lower priority. And no one is looking to “kick the can down the road” on this. Saying one “side” is doing so is divisive. Let’s stay focused on the real question here. That question is whether you, the town of Harvard, in addition to spending millions on fixing very real problems, also want to spend more millions on school improvements.

I believe the building committee took decisions on themselves that should have been left to the town. And, that we have been offered a project that is considerably more expensive, and of greater scope, than is necessary. If we vote NO, the school building committee has to go back to the estimate and change that estimate to reflect WHY it got voted down. They have a couple of months to do that, and then they resubmit to the MSBA. Since the school building committee has left us with no other choice, I believe a NO vote is the best option for the town. 

References

Investigative & Assessment Report for Harvard Public Schools – Hildreth Elementary School – K-Wing, Blackstone Block Architects, September 22, 2014 (accessed as an attachment to the 2016 NV5 Request for Services), available online at https://drive.google.com/file/d/146ET9gFtPHBw7-v55pgwW2uBFcz_-7Is/view?usp=sharing
Information Is Beautiful, Rhetological Fallacies; https://informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/rhetological-fallacies/
May 2007, Harvard submission to MSBA
The School Committee, with the approval of the selectmen, submitted a packet of materials to the state School Building Authority applying for aid to fix deficiencies in the elementary school, primarily the mold trapped in the K-wing’s walls. But no further action was taken at that time. 2007 HES SOI: http://info.massschoolbuildings.org/SOI_List/GetReport.aspx?mid=200801250005
The Harvard Post (for research on the 1988 project)
                From Post research notes, volumes not recorded. Copies available at the public library.
1987, Brick building renovation planned, “brown” building demolition planning
10-87, schematics
10-16-87, Hildreth new building design to reflect old Bromfield school architecture
                Computer wiring access built-in
Publication dates recorded
1-29-88, p. 1, 8, School Building Cuts Look Inevitable
2-5-88, p. 1, 20, Selectmen Nix More Money For Schools
2-12-88, p. 3, Planners Want $1.3M More
                p. 3, Why the Overruns? Board Asks
2-19-88, p. 3, Olsen Finds $2,000,000 in Cost Overrun
                p.3, New School Cost Now Set at $15,000,000
2-26-88, p. 5, Planners Will Wait till June to Ask for Additional Funds
6-3-88, p. 1, 16, School Bid Opening is Delayed Again
6-10-88, p. 4, Planners OK Site Plan
6-17-88, p. 1, 17, School Sub-Bids Are Lower than Expected
                p. 1, 17 & 19, Good News and Bad News
6-24-88, p. 1, 5 & 13, Again: It’s Good News and Bad News
7-8-88, p. 3, Asbestos Removal Will Cost $278K
7-29-88, p. 1, 11, School Project Gets Going
8-26-88, p. 1, No Septic Plan, No Permit for School Project
9-9-88, p. 1, 9, Schools Get Approval for Septic System
                p. 1, 9, Zoning Board approves elementary school septic system
9-16-88, p. 1, 15, Building permit for new elementary school issued.
                                , Contractor Annoyed at Delays, Uncooperative Boards
3-10-89, p. 1, Town, School Contractor Disagree
5-5-89, p. 11, School Building and renovation Project Picks up Steam; But worries Persist About Cost Overruns
2-9-90, p. 3, It’s Done at Last! New Building Opens Feb. 27

The Harvard Press
11/30/2012, School Committee drops request for kindergarten wing rebuild,
http://www.harvardpress.com/ARTICLES/Art...
12/12/2014, School officials say K-wing is safe but must be rebuilt soon,
http://www.harvardpress.com/ARTICLES/Art...
May 4, 2017, The K-wing’s troubled history shapes the HES renovation project,
http://www.harvardpress.com/ARTICLES/Art...
Feb 15, 2018, What if? Repairing HES could top $28 million; state would pay nothing,
http://www.harvardpress.com/ARTICLES/ArtMID/4508/ArticleID/16655




[1] Changes to the roof were discussed, as going with a flat roof would have been cheaper, but they decided not to compromise, as the town had been experiencing problems with roofs on other public buildings.