Calgary public schools affected by devastating floodwaters - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 02:20 AM | Calgary | -4.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary public schools affected by devastating floodwaters

A couple hundred Calgary students have lost their school in the wake of flooding that devastated the city last month.

Elbow Park School completely damaged, but school board hopes Rideau Park School will be open this fall

CBE schools affected by flood

11 years ago
Duration 1:29
Offiiclas are figuring out the future of two Calgary public schools that were damaged by flooding.

Acouple hundred Calgary students have lost their school in the wake of flooding that devastated the city last month.

The Calgary Board of Education is trying to figure out where Elbow Park students will go to classthis fall.

The building off Sifton Boulevard was so badly damaged by the floods, officials say it won't be open in September and it could take years to repair.

"It's very much extended throughout the building," saidFrank Coppinger with the Calgary Board of Education.

"We can describe the building to be inthree portions: the central portion is stable, thetwo wings have settled, and so it's broken its back away from the centre part of the building. So it's extensive structural damage with cracking throughout the building."

Officials say the goal is to keep all the students together whenrelocating them. Options include sending them to an empty school within the CBE's inventory, or having them share a nearby facility in portables.

The Alberta government has ordered 75 portable classrooms. Education Minister Jeff Johnson says they will be used throughout southern Alberta.

Parents should expect to hear where their kids will be going to school by the end of July.

Rideau Park School, also located near the Elbow River, receiveddamage in the June 20flood as well.

Officials sayall the computers and desks will need to be replaced and it could cost up to$4 million to repairthe buildings foundation, electrical system and boilers.

But the board is confident the school will be ready for students in September.