Fairhope, Alabama
FAIRHOPER'S COMMUNITY PARK
According to Mayor Kant, the Baldwin School Board is refusing to renew the city's now-expired lease for the land at the corner of Morphy and Church Streets.
Kant said School Superintendent Alan Lee claims one Board member has concerns about the safety of the playgrounds there. Efforts to contact Lee and the other School Board members went unanswered.
Volunteers built the playground in 1997 after the city leased the land from county (for 15 years) with the stipulation the K-1 school across the street could still use the property as a playground for its students. The school closed in 2011.
Another source familiar with the situation says the School Board may seek to sell the property if the penny sales tax renewal referendum fails on Tuesday.
After receiving the results of a safety inspection last August, the city has been extensively upgrading the aging facility.
FAIRHOPER'S COMMUNITY PARK
According to Mayor Kant, the Baldwin School Board is refusing to renew the city's now-expired lease for the land at the corner of Morphy and Church Streets.
Kant said School Superintendent Alan Lee claims one Board member has concerns about the safety of the playgrounds there. Efforts to contact Lee and the other School Board members went unanswered.
Volunteers built the playground in 1997 after the city leased the land from county (for 15 years) with the stipulation the K-1 school across the street could still use the property as a playground for its students. The school closed in 2011.
Another source familiar with the situation says the School Board may seek to sell the property if the penny sales tax renewal referendum fails on Tuesday.
After receiving the results of a safety inspection last August, the city has been extensively upgrading the aging facility.
Comments
Locally controlled schools are the only way to stop the Baldwin County Board of Education from stomping all over Fairhope.
We all know they always intended for this tax to be a permanent.
Market value for the parcel of that size is probably over a million dollars, which coincidentally, is about the same amount of money required to completely setup a city school system.
If the city had the balls to step up and take control of its own schools, this would not be a problem. The park would instantly belong to the city the second that the city council announced their intention to form a city school system like over half the school systems in the state.