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Schools
No action on proposed school
Neighbors say they don't want it, school leaders say hurry up. A county committee delays its decision.
By BY JODIE TILLMAN Times Staff Writer
Published January 12, 2007
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[Times photo: Brendan Fitterer]
Al Hein, who lives near the proposed site for a high school in Hudson, gathers with other residents before a meeting of the development review committee Thursday. Hein said the increased traffic would be dangerous.
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NEW PORT RICHEY - Facing an outcry from a crowd of about 50 residents, county administrators on Thursday postponed until next month a decision on the controversial proposal to build a high school in Hudson. The development review committee's decision to, well, not decide yet guarantees opponents of the project one more chance to plead their case with the School Board when it meets this month. About 50 Hudson residents showed up at Thursday's committee meeting, armed with neon protest signs with slogans like "Don't you know what the roads will cost first?" For nearly an hour, about a dozen residents spoke, mostly about their traffic concerns. Pasco County Administrator John Gallagher told the opponents that their real beef was with the School Board - not his committee. "We're just staff members," said Gallagher, chairman of the committee, which makes recommendations to county commissioners. "We're not elected." The school district can't finalize its $8-million contract on the potential site until it receives county approval, a case that unhappy school officials made Thursday in arguing for the committee to make a decision. The development review committee will take up the matter again Feb. 22. Their recommendation then goes to county commissioners, who have final say. The school district is under contract to pay $8-million for 37 acres at State Road 52 and Canton Avenue. The county currently assesses the commercially zoned property at $1.5-million for tax purposes. The land is owned by EBML Enterprises LLC, which is registered to Edwin Sargent of Dade City. Ray Gadd, the school district's representative on the development review committee, and other school officials in attendance opposed the committee's delay. They said they had already held a number of meetings with residents and that they had deadlines to meet under the contract. District officials say the proposed three-story facility for nearly 2,000 students would help relieve overcrowding at Ridgewood High School. Al Hein, who lives near the proposed site, told committee members that the traffic, particularly on Canton Avenue, would be dangerous. Plus, he said, the school district has not looked hard enough at other options for property. "Pasco County is being hijacked on this," he said. Residents said after the meeting that they were happy at least for the delay. "This gives us an additional time to be heard," said Dan Slagle. "But for Mr. Gallagher, this would've gone forward." Jodie Tillman can be reached at 727 869-6247 or jtillman@sptimes.com. .
[Last modified January 12, 2007, 06:33:21]
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by april
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01/12/07 09:13 PM
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I would like to see a new high school in Dade City That school is so old and ugly that is the only plce they should look at I think
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by Kel
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01/12/07 10:39 AM
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Traffic isnt your concern until the buses slow your trip to work, a new driver causes an accident, or the school zone forces you to slow down.
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by Jim
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01/12/07 10:17 AM
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Hey Mike, Don't say that - I left the state because of the attitudes of the 50 mentioned here, don't send them up north, that's where Floridians are moving to get away!
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by Mike
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01/12/07 09:44 AM
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Build it anyway, the education of our young people is more important than 50 residents concern for traffic, which is not any news in Pasco County. Welcome to Florida. It's not a new problem. If the Hudson residents don't agree, move to North Dakota.
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