The state of school facilities is not great, finds USGBC’s Center for Green Schools

by Shane Henson — March 18, 2013—U.S. schools must modernize their facilities in order to meet current health, safety and educational standards and better serve students, according to a report recently released by The Center for Green Schools at the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC).

The report, State of our Schools, features a foreword by former President Bill Clinton and stresses that schools are currently facing a $271 billion deferred maintenance bill just to bring the buildings up to working order—approximately $5,450 per student.

The last comprehensive report on America’s school facilities was conducted by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in 1995 and indicated that 15,000 U.S. schools were circulating air that at the time was deemed unfit to breathe. The USGBC report calls on the GAO to conduct an updated survey on the condition of America’s schools in order to paint a more complete picture of the scale and scope of today’s needs. The USGBC report also estimates that the cost to both bring schools into good repair and address modernization needs is $542 billion over the next 10 years for Pre-K-12 school buildings.

“The places where our children learn matter. This report is a critical first step to taking action and creating healthy, sustainable school buildings,” said Rick Fedrizzi, president, CEO and founding chair of the USGBC.

Key recommendations from the report include:

  • Expand the Common Core of Data (a set of academic expectations collected annually by the National Center for Education Statistics that define the knowledge and skills all students should master by the end of each grade level) to include school-level data on building age, building size and site size.
  • Improve the current fiscal reporting of school district facilities maintenance and operations data to the National Center for Education Statistics so that utility and maintenance expenditures are collected separately.
  • Improve the collection of capital outlay data from school districts to include identification of the source of capital outlay funding and distinctions between capital outlay categories for new construction and for existing facilities.
  • Provide financial and technical assistance to states from the U.S. Department of Education to incorporate facilities data in their state longitudinal education data systems.
  • Mandate a GAO facilities condition survey take place every 10 years, with the next one beginning immediately.