PARIS — Some School Administrative District 17 directors say it’s time to close the doors of the Streaked Mountain School on lower Main Street in Norway.

The full board is expected to hear a proposal at its March 5 meeting on what it would cost to move students and staff to a new facility. The decision to look into a long-term lease at another building followed a tour by the SAD 17 Finance and Operations Committee on Feb. 5.

“My mouth nearly hit the floor when I walked inside,” committee Chairman Barry Patrie of Waterford said. “It is in serious need of some very costly upgrades.”

The 164-year-old building is one of half a dozen original one-room schoolhouses that once dotted the town. Built in 1854, it was known as the Lower Primary School. It was one of the few buildings on Main Street to escape the inferno of 1894 that destroyed much of Main Street.

The school is divided into two rooms and used by about 20 students in the Streaked Mountain School program in the mornings, and about 10 to 12 students from the school and others in the afternoon for individualized instruction.

Patrie told the committee there are numerous issues in the building, such as the heating system and pipes freezing.

Advertisement

“It’s just antiquated and I don’t think it is suitable for the two programs,” he said.

The committee is looking at Dr. Tere Porter’s former optometrist building at 66 Paris St. in Norway as a possible place to lease. The 23,000-square-foot building is diagonally across from Rite Aid at the four-way intersection by the Oxford Hills Comprehensive High school on Route 26.

SAD 17 Business Manager Cathy Fanjoy said last week that she is putting together a financial report for the committee that will be presented in March. She said officials are looking at a long-term, possibly five-year lease.

The successful Streaked Mountain School program, which tailors curriculum to individual students who are unable to attain their full potential in large school environment, was started in 1994, when the Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School opened an on-site alternative education program.

According to information from school officials, by 1998, there were discussions about finding an off-site program. The school board approved the idea several years later and the school opened in the Rowe Elementary School Annex around 2001, until its move into the current facility around 2009.

ldixon@sunmediagroup.net

In 2013, students put up their first sign designating the building as the Streaked Mountain School on lower Main Street in Norway. (Leslie H. Dixon/Advertiser Democrat)


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.