Sequim Community School building to be razed

SEQUIM –– Since Olympic Peninsula Academy moved into a remodeled space last month, the 63-year-old Sequim Community School building is all but empty and soon will be boarded up.

The academy for home-schooled students was the last of several organizations to move from the 60-year-old Sequim Community School building at 220 W. Alder St. into a new home

“The plan, for right now, is to turn off the boiler and lock it up,” Sequim School District Superintendent Kelly Shea said.

Eventually, the district will have the building razed. Doing so will cost an estimated $500,000, according to Brian Lewis, district business manager.

“Our goal is to take it down. It’s just a matter of where are we going to come up with the money?” Shea said.

Built in 1950, the building served the city as Helen Haller Elementary before the new Haller halls were built in the early-1970s at 350 W. Fir St.

The district then used the Alder Street building as the middle school until 1998, when the current middle school building at 301 W. Hendrickson Road was constructed.

Up until last month, the Sequim Community School had served as a center for several family and education-related organizations, such as Head Start; the Women, Infants and Children program and Peninsula College classes for General Educational Development — or GED — certificates and English as a Second Language.

“That was a great old building. When it closed, it really displaced a lot of people,” said Norma Herbold, a teacher at Peninsula College’s Sequim Education Center.

She added that the building’s antique boiler did not heat the school effectively and burned up $80,000 worth of heating fuel a year.

The school district renovated a building on the Community School lot, called the 1979 addition, for $300,000. Lewis said funding was borrowed from the district’s general fund and will be repaid through the savings in energy costs.

The Sequim School District’s developmental preschool moved to Helen Haller Elementary and the Sequim Alternative High School to two classrooms above the auditorium above the Sequim High School, 601 N. Sequim Ave.

When it had to leave the Community School building, Peninsula College purchased a building at Sequim Avenue and Spruce Street and created the Sequim Education Center.

“I never thought I’d see the day that Peninsula College would have its own building here in Sequim,” Herbold said.

The center offers Adult Basic Education, General Educational Development and English as a Second Language classes. It also offers classes for those who want to improve their reading, writing and math skills.

Those classes are offered year-round now, Herbold said.

The college also began offering computer classes for Sequim residents when winter quarter started.

Herbold noted the school provided room for a child care studio for parents who need a place for their children while they take classes.

The Women, Infants and Children — of WIC — program is operating in the Sequim Food Bank, 144 W. Alder St., on Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and

1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

The program offers vouchers for free, nutritious foods and information on healthy eating for pregnant women and families with children younger than 5 years old.

Iva Burks, director of Clallam County Health and Human Services, said the program serves 350 families in the Sequim area and 1,340 across the county.

Although the food bank allows WIC to use its office Tuesdays for free, the county is seeking another, permanent location, Burks said.

With the move out of the school and a shrinking budget, the Olympic Community Action Programs discontinued its day care program and moved its program for preschool children aged 3 to 5 into a portable building at 226 N. Sequim Ave.

Early Head Start, where teachers help families develop learning skills in children as old as 3, now operates in the homes of families.

The Sequim Head Start program has 46 children enrolled, with 16 in Early Head Start, said Deborah Hoswell, Early Childhood Programs Director for OlyCAP.

Head Start, too, may look for a more permanent place, she said.

“Right now, we’re settled here. But we’re always open to other possibilities,” she said.

A classroom for the developmentally disabled, has split its locations among the high school and Olympic Theatre Arts in Sequim and Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Port Angeles.

Instructor Bonnie Smith said the move has been positive, as the group added more classes and expanded to four days. The hitch is the group must now charge students $2 an hour for the classes to offset the program’s increased rental costs.

The organization known as Mosaic once was called Special Needs Advocacy Parents, or SNAP, which was started in 1998. The board changed the name at the end of 2011.

For more information, visit Clallammosaic.org.

The last to vacate, Olympic Peninsula Academy moved into a separate building right beside it, called the 1979 addition, 221 W. Fir St.

The school district gave the building a $300,000 renovation to turn the former maintenance shop and home economics room into eight classrooms to accommodate the 12-year-old district-funded academy’s 14 teachers and 88 students.

The academy provides educational materials, curriculum guidance and hands-on classes to students who are home-schooled.

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Joe Smillie can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Ellen White Face, left, and Dora Ragland enjoy some conversation after finishing a Christmas dinner prepared by Salvation Army Port Angeles staff and volunteers. The Salvation Army anticipated serving 120-150 people at its annual holiday meal on Tuesday. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Hundreds served at annual Salvation Army dinner

Numbers represent growing need for assistance, captain says

Jefferson separates prosecutor, coroner roles

Funeral director hired on one-year basis

Public concerned about hospital partnership

Commenters question possible Catholic affiliation

Sylvia White of Port Townsend is making a major gift to the nonprofit Northwind Art. (Diane Urbani/Northwind Art)
Port Townsend artist makes major gift to Northwind

Artist Sylvia White, who envisioned an arts center in… Continue reading

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown Port Angeles. The Winter Ice Village, operated by the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce, is open daily from noon to 9 p.m. through Jan. 5. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fresh ice

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown… Continue reading

Paranormal investigator Amanda Paulson sits next to a photo of Hallie Illingworth at Lake Crescent, where Illingworth’s soap-like body was discovered in 1940. Paulson stars in a newly released documentary, “The Lady of the Lake,” that explores the history of Illingworth’s death and the possible paranormal presence that has remained since. (Ryan Grulich)
Documentary explores paranormal aspects disappearance

Director says it’s a ’ Ghost story for Christmas’

Funding for lodge in stopgap measure

Park official ‘touched by outpouring of support’

Wednesday’s e-edition to be printed Thursday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition on… Continue reading

Joe Nole.
Jefferson County Sheriff Joe Nole resigns

Commissioners to be appoint replacement within 60 days

Residents of various manufactured home parks applaud the Sequim City Council’s decision on Dec. 9 to approve a new overlay that preserves manufactured home parks so that they cannot be redeveloped for other uses. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim preserves overlay for homes

Plots can be sold, but use must be same

A ballot box in the Sequim Village Shopping Center at 651 W. Washington St. now holds two fire suppressant systems to prevent fires inside after incidents in October in Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore. A second device was added by Clallam County staff to boxes countywide to safeguard ballots for all future elections. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Political party officials fine with Clallam’s loss of bellwether

With election certified, reps reflect on goals, security

For 20-plus years, Bob and Kelly Macaulay have decorated their boat and dock off East Sequim Bay Road for Christmas, seen here more than a mile away. However, the couple sold their boat earlier this year. (Doug Schwarz)
Couple retires Christmas boat display on Sequim Bay

Red decorations lit up area for 20-plus years