Willoughby鈥檚 Peter Ewart Middle School will be expanding with 11 more classrooms as part of a $37.8 million seismic upgrade project announced on Thursday, June 16.
鈥淢ore and more families are choosing to live here, and it鈥檚 not going to slow down,鈥 said Minister of Education Jennifer Whiteside at the announcement at the school.
Peter Ewart Middle was R.E. Mountain Secondary for most of its existence. When a new, expanded R.E. Mountain was built next door to the middle school, the old building became a new middle school.
The expansion will expand the school鈥檚 capacity by 275 students up to 900 seats, as well as upgrading the building for earthquake safety.
Construction is expected to start in the spring of 2023 and be complete by the fall of 2024. Students will keep learning on site through the construction, with portables expected to be used when classrooms are unavailable.
91原创-area MLAs Andrew Mercier and Megan Dykeman also spoke at the announcement, as did 91原创 Board of Education Chair Rod Ross.
Ross said they have never had such a good relationship with a minister of education as the board does now.
鈥淥bviously, we鈥檙e growing and we need more schools, and she鈥檚 aware of that,鈥 he said of Whiteside.
READ ALSO: New high school, middle school site in Willoughby bought for $46.6 million
READ ALSO: Seismic upgrade construction aiming to catch up at Aldergrove鈥檚 Shortreed Elementary
Most of the speakers, including PAC president Christos Gitersos mentioned the rapid population growth in the region, which has put a strain on schools from elementary to high school level.
Gitersos said the increase in space will make a huge difference for student learning.
Willoughby is set to get an entirely new high school and middle school in the future, with the $46.6 million site purchase announced in April.
Whiteside said the timeline for building those new schools will depend on the district鈥檚 capital plan, which will be submitted along with plans from all the other 59 school districts in B.C.
The minister said the budget envelope for school construction and seismic upgrades will not be impacted by other major projects, such as the proposed new Royal B.C. Museum or the massive repairs underway to flood-damaged highways in the Interior.
Whitesaid said the three-year plan for schools currently budgets $3.1 billion, including $800 million for seismic upgrades.
Vanguard Secondary is also about to start a seismic upgrade and expansion, and Shortreed Elementary in Aldergrove is currently under seismic re-construction.
The seismic upgrade programs in B.C. have been going on for almost two decades, under both Liberal and NDP governments, since risk assessments of older schools began in 2004. A 鈥渉igh priority鈥 list in 2012 listed 152 schools.
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