1978 Western Sun article re potential purchaseEdmonds council grilled
on purchase of school
By PAM WITMER
Staff Writer
EDMONDS - The City Council
adopted a plan for potential use of
the Edmonds Elementary School site
Tuesday nite, but members of the
audience were more concerned about
whether the city was going to buy
the site from the Edmonds School
District.
"Is this a serious discussion about
the elementary school?" Norma
Bruns asked the council. "Are you
really serious about buying it? We
went through this same procese with
the junior high — at what point is
there going to be a decision on the
part of the council?"
Ms. Bruns and other audience
members said they didn't want to
see a repeat performance of the
council's futile efforts last year to
buy the junior high from the school
district.
"We saw this all happen before,"
said Ray Fischl. He explained the
council had gotten to this same
stage of negotiations on the junior
high site — and then Puget Sound
College of the Bible stepped in and
bought it.
Fischl asked the council if its
$200,000 offer was really in good
faith when the city knew the School
Board's price was $500:000.
"We never mentioned a $200,000
figure," said Councilman Tom
Carns. "But our offer was based on
our appraisal of the site."
Fischl said he and others in Ed-
monds were concerned about wheth-
er the council was serious about
buying the school site, particularly
since school officials recently said
they had two offers from private
businesses.
Councilwoman Katie Allen, who
was formerly on the School Board,
reminded the audience that the city
has a 60-day right of first refusal.
That means if the school district
gets a firm offer for the property,
the district has to send an official
letter to the city to inform Edmonds
that the 60-day period has begun.
Then the city has, 60 days to meet
the school- district's other offer. If
the city can't meet the offer, the
school district can sell to anyone.
City officials have not received any
official notice from the school dis-
trict, Fischl and Ms. Bruns learned
Tuesday night.
"Are you fellows really pursuing
this vigorously?" asked Laura Hall,
a member of the Edmonds Planning
Commission. "The public is really in
the dark on this. We don't know
your plans. Where are we?"
Carns replied: "We're in negotia-
tions. You don't do that in the
newspapers."
Councilman Phil Clement said the
last time the school district and city
officials met, the agreement was
that both groups would get new site
appraisals and exchange that
information.
The council had the city's new ap-
praisal figures in the members' in-
formation packets Tuesday. City
.Attorney John Wallace said an exec-
utive session held after that meeting
updated the council on negotiations.
City officials contacted today said
they had not yet received their new
appraisal figures. No target date
was announced for receipt of the
new price estimate.
"You don't do this kind of thing
overnight," Carns told the Tuesday
audience. "We're getting our new
appraisal and they are getting theirs
too. We're working on it."
In the meantime, council members
said they were doing what they
could to assure the residents of Ed-
monds that the property would be
well utilized if and when the pur-
chase goes through.
The plan approved by the council
at Tuesday's meeting calls for even-
tual construction of a new library
building including underground
parking. There also would be cultur-
al and recreational program use of
the existing school building over a
period of time. The existing library
space would be then used for admin-
istrative office space.
The plan was suggested by a con-
sultant hired by the council. The
consultant's job was to study the site
and come up with a plan that would
provide the best overall use of the
space.
The Edmonds consulting firm of
Bailey and Behm will not put togeth-
er a step-by-step plan for carrying
out the site -use scheme approved by
the.council. That work is estimated
to take about one more month.