Kamis, 30 Agustus 2012

School districts working to beat the record August heat in classrooms

Math teacher Chaine Henson brought in her own air conditioner to cool down her classroom at Cyprus High School in Magna on Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012.

Laura Seitz, Deseret News

MAGNA — Water bottles were perched on the desk of nearly every student Wednesday at Cyprus High School, and teachers spoke over the buzz of portable air conditioning units.

In the hallway, students stopped intermittently to cool off in front of large fans placed to help air flow through the building.

Record August heat is providing a familiar but unwelcome challenge for several school districts as students and teachers returning to class try to keep cool. 

Granite School District has been installing air conditioning systems at all of its schools and will complete the project on budget and ahead of schedule in November, district spokesman Ben Horsley said.

But for 11 remaining schools, including Cyprus, Utah's desert heat will be calling the shots for the next few weeks. 

"People are getting antsy about getting their air conditioning," Horsley said. "We are asking people to be patient."

The issue has been exacerbated at Cyprus, where a malfunction with the dampers — vents that allow cool night air to flow through the building after hours — has filled classrooms with stifled air and temperatures in the mid- to upper-80s.

In addition to the hallway fans, bottled water has been delivered daily and contractors working on the air conditioning installation have been asked to address the problem with the dampers. But there's only so much that can be done when temperatures outside are nearly 100 degrees.

Cyprus junior Marin Easton said the heat has made it difficult to concentrate in class. But that's pretty typical in the first week of the school year, she said.

"It feels the same," Easton said. "Really hot."

Cyprus Principal Steve Hess said the heat is a detriment to learning, and school officials are try to mitigate that as much as possible.

"The heat affects you," Hess said.

Adding air conditioning to a single school costs an average of $1 million, Horsley said. The funds for the Granite District project were secured through a bond election in 2009.

Other school districts in the state also have installed air conditioning systems in recent years, but many of Utah's students — Horsley estimated 60 percent — are still subject to the whims of Mother Nature.

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