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Sharon School Board is considering buying back the former Hadley Elementary School at Highland Road and Boyd Drive and using the large lot behind it to more than double the size of the 1954 brick building. The district closed Hadley in the mid-1980s and sold it to the then-owner of what became Laurel Business Institute. Laurel is moving to downtown Sharon.
John Zavinski/Herald / John Zavinski/Herald


Published June 10, 2009 10:42 pm - Whether they decide to use the building or not, Sharon school directors want to buy the former Hadley Elementary School.

Sharon school board may buy former Hadley school
1 option: Expand or replace Hadley to house Case students

By Courtney L. Anderson
Herald Staff Writer

SHARON

Whether they decide to use the building or not, Sharon school directors want to buy the former Hadley Elementary School.

Superintendent John Sarandrea at a public hearing Wednesday said the district is looking to buy the building on Boyd Drive, which has housed Laurel Technical Institute, for $252,500. He said officials want the property even if they don’t decide to build on it.

’Ludicrous,’ said Jim Grasso of the move. ’You made it clear you did not listen to the taxpayers.’

Sarandrea said no decision has been made to move the 550 Case Avenue Elementary students to Hadley, but the board does want to tear down the former high school due to its age and condition.

School directors could decide to build a new school on the Case footprint or at 335 Boyd Drive, he said.

Richard and Patricia McMahon own the roughly 4.4 acres the school building sits on and the district owns about 4 acres around it that are used for playfields.

Sarandrea said the district could raze the building and expand the field area, as such spaces are needed in the district.

Paperwork prepared to submit to the Pennsylvania Department of Education shows the district would pay another $7,000 in fees for the sale and $242,800 for such things as grading and sewers if they develop the land.

About 50 people attended the hearing. Folks voiced their opinions about what the district should do about the aging Case Avenue school.

The district had to hold the hearing if they intend to ask the state to reimburse part of the cost of the project. Documents show the state might pay $133,833 toward turning Hadley into a Sharon elementary school again.

Those who spoke at the meeting offered a variety of comments, from those like Guy Cunningham who support tearing down Case and building a new school at its centralized location.

’We’re ahead of the game,’ Sue Mulvey said, adding that research shows campus locations are good for school districts. ’I’m confused as to why we would look to take that advantage away.’

William McConnell Jr. said he wants to see the district analyze a more modest renovation of Case, noting that the cost of that has not been disclosed in public documents.

’Remember, the city is in trouble financially,’ Sam Messina told the board. He wondered if there’d be anyone left in the city to pay for a new school once it’s in use because the population is shrinking.

When asked by Dave Kepics how the district was going to pay for a building project, Sarandrea said it would likely be a mix of loans, state funds, savings and ’taxpayer effort.’



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