Traverse City News and Events

What's Next For Old Mission School, TCAPS After Deal

Jan. 21, 2017

Following more than a year of public meetings, board discussions and private negotiations, Traverse City Area Public Schools (TCAPS) and the Old Mission Peninsula Education Foundation (OMPEF) struck a tentative agreement Friday for the sale of Old Mission Peninsula School.

OMPEF will purchase the school from TCAPS for $1.1 million, a price that includes both the building and its contents. The building title will officially transfer July 1, 2018, with purchase funds held in escrow until the transfer is complete. The agreement follows several weeks of negotiations as OMPEF upped its original offer of $750,000 to $1 million, with TCAPS countering with a preferred ballpark of $1.25-$1.5 million.

So what's next for the school and the district?

“Our goal is to have a school up and running in September 2018,” OMPEF President Allison O’Keefe says. “That’s a promise we’ve made to the community and our donors, and we will see that through.” OMPEF’s next step is to lay out a new fundraising plan for school operations in a community meeting in early March, according to O’Keefe.

As part of the purchase agreement, TCAPS will continue to provide educational services to the school through June 2018, during which time the building will remain under the district’s control. TCAPS board members recently voted to redistrict Old Mission effective fall 2018, meaning Old Mission students would attend the newly reconstructed Eastern Elementary School beginning that September. O’Keefe has expressed her hope that TCAPS and OMPEF will be able to negotiate an agreement for the district to continue providing educational services into fall 2018 and beyond, but says the foundation is committed to operating a school in the Old Mission building either way.

TCAPS Superintendent Paul Soma says TCAPS is open to negotiating with OMPEF to continue educational services at Old Mission after the building transfer is complete. “The door is open, and we’re absolutely willing to have a discussion with the foundation and see what they’re thinking,” he says.

TCAPS board members still need to officially approve the purchase agreement at their 6pm meeting Monday, though the vote is considered a formality. Board members previously unanimously authorized representatives to negotiate a purchase agreement with OMPEF and expressed their support for a deal.

O’Keefe has been working to save Old Mission since late 2015, when TCAPS targeted the school – along with fellow low-enrollment schools Interlochen Community School and the International School at Bertha Vos – for closure. An anonymous donor group stepped forward to back an initial $750,000 offer to buy the school, with O’Keefe and the nonprofit OMPEF representing the donors publicly. The donor group has since agreed to contribute additional funds to meet the $1.1 million sale price, according to O’Keefe.

“We’re obviously thrilled, as we've been working hard on this (deal) for over a year," says O'Keefe. "To see it finally come to fruition is a huge relief and a bit emotional, to be honest."

On the other side of the ledger, proceeds from the sale will provide a healthy revenue boost to TCAPS’ coffers – albeit one that won’t be realized for another year-and-a-half. Soma says TCAPS will have a structurally balanced budget this spring, providing opportunities for the $1.1 million to be used in other ways. Board members have discussed establishing an “innovation fund” that could use funds to cover start-up costs for expanding programs like TCAPS’ international program, its newly announced homeschool partnership program, and its virtual school.

“The idea is that it could be a good use for seed money for innovation in those programs, and when the innovation becomes profitable, you refill the fund,” Soma says. “That’s just one of the ideas we’ve discussed (for the Old Mission proceeds). We're still in the very early stages at this point.”

Soma believes TCAPS and OMPEF reached a "fair price" at $1.1 million for Old Mission. “I’m pleased we’ve been able to get to this point," he says. "I think it was (the result of) diligent and hard work by multiple people to reach an agreement that serves the purposes of multiple parties and can be viewed positively from all angles.”

Comment

Final Improvement Work Coming to Slabtown Streets

Read More >>

TIF Plan Back for DDA Vote

Read More >>

Potential $11-$16 Million LaFranier Expansion On County's Agenda

Read More >>

Ransomware Group Claims Credit for TCAPS Attack

Read More >>

Airport Updates: Cherry Fest Air Show Agreement Approved, Tech Park Hearing Scheduled

Read More >>

Traffic Stop Leads to Search of Drug House

Read More >>

One Year of Recreation Cannabis in Traverse City

Read More >>

Tank Space Opens on Eighth, More Retail/Restaurant News

Read More >>

New Designation Means Big Money For Career-Tech Center's Manufacturing Programs

Read More >>

What’s Next for the Pines?

Read More >>

From Neighborhood Bike Club To $730,000 Impact: The History Of Mud Sweat & Beers

Read More >>

TART Trail, Union Contracts, Morgan Farms Neighborhood Association on City Agenda

Read More >>

City Project Updates: FishPass, M-22/M-72 Reconstruction

Read More >>

Place Your Bets: Expert to Talk Online Sports Gambling Boom

Read More >>