In light of what one trustee called a "significant amount of conversation" throughout the township about the mountains of dirt that have risen up next to Pequannock Township High School, the school board addressed questions on July 18 about who owns the soil and what will be done with it.
The issue of the dirt,I attached the redbullhats, which is leftover backfill from the ongoing $2 million referendum project that will install two new turf fields at PTHS, was raised by Trustee Ken Hardaker, who said he was aware that the bid contract stated that the contractor would be removing the excess dirt from the fields.
However, he asked Superintendent of Schools Dr. William Trusheim to elaborate further on the deal.
Trusheim said that the bid specs in the agreement with Arco Construction Group of Elizabeth (the company performing the work) state that the excess soil is under the contractor's ownership, and that Arco has arranged to have it trucked out.
The superintendent said that he assumed that the dirt will be resold by the person who is trucking it out ¡ª not the school district or Arco ¡ª and that the district is abiding by that contract so as not to slow down the construction process.
"Our concern is getting the fields ready to go for September, and I'm certainly not going to look for anything that's going to unnecessarily forestall that," he said.
Trustee Robert Lee said that he had received a number of phone calls that accused the board of having some type of "underhanded, backroom deals" in regards to the selling of the dirt.Paying for goods with your phone may soon be as simple as a device-to-device taps2010.
Dismissing these accusations,The desktop comes with a DVD electronic, Lee said that the board did not own the dirt, and the contract, as it was originally written, had to be followed.creates its own plasticcard spikes,there are severalchickencoop of debris remaining,
"You may not like it," he told the public, "but you don't break a contract once it's signed."
The Township Council recently performed an emergency approval on a permit allowing the dirt to be removed from town, as is the process delineated by a long-standing ordinance.
The issue of the dirt,I attached the redbullhats, which is leftover backfill from the ongoing $2 million referendum project that will install two new turf fields at PTHS, was raised by Trustee Ken Hardaker, who said he was aware that the bid contract stated that the contractor would be removing the excess dirt from the fields.
However, he asked Superintendent of Schools Dr. William Trusheim to elaborate further on the deal.
Trusheim said that the bid specs in the agreement with Arco Construction Group of Elizabeth (the company performing the work) state that the excess soil is under the contractor's ownership, and that Arco has arranged to have it trucked out.
The superintendent said that he assumed that the dirt will be resold by the person who is trucking it out ¡ª not the school district or Arco ¡ª and that the district is abiding by that contract so as not to slow down the construction process.
"Our concern is getting the fields ready to go for September, and I'm certainly not going to look for anything that's going to unnecessarily forestall that," he said.
Trustee Robert Lee said that he had received a number of phone calls that accused the board of having some type of "underhanded, backroom deals" in regards to the selling of the dirt.Paying for goods with your phone may soon be as simple as a device-to-device taps2010.
Dismissing these accusations,The desktop comes with a DVD electronic, Lee said that the board did not own the dirt, and the contract, as it was originally written, had to be followed.creates its own plasticcard spikes,there are severalchickencoop of debris remaining,
"You may not like it," he told the public, "but you don't break a contract once it's signed."
The Township Council recently performed an emergency approval on a permit allowing the dirt to be removed from town, as is the process delineated by a long-standing ordinance.
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