Home » News » Public Safety
June 11. 2012 12:09AM

City officials check out the deck that collapsed on a modular classroom at Beech Street School after the children that were injured were cared for on Friday afternoon. (Thomas Roy/Union Leader)
Linked articles:
Beech St. School students escape serious injury after platform collapses
Portables closed, repairs to be made at city schools in wake of ramp collapse

City officials check out the deck that collapsed on a modular classroom at Beech Street School after the children that were injured were cared for on Friday afternoon. (Thomas Roy/Union Leader)
Beech St. School students escape serious injury after platform collapses
MANCHESTER — Portable units at five city schools are closed today to allow repair work to be completed on ramps leading to and from the structures. The work is being done after a wooden platform at the Beech Street School collapsed Friday.
“Facilities personnel were out this weekend at schools that have portables and similar structures,” Superintendent of Schools Thomas Brennan said.
“The portables at these schools were identified as locations where minor work could be performed, so the decision was made to close the portables so Facilities crews can shore up the ramps. The plan now is to have them reopen on Tuesday. Until then, we'll find space within our school buildings to accommodate the students who would normally be in these portables. We don't want to take any chances with them.”
Brennan said the portables are at the Beech Street School, Northwest Elementary, and the Wilson, McDonough and Weston schools.
Portable units and ramps at the Jewett, Gossler Park, Green Acres and Hallsville schools, as well as the Manchester School of Technology (the adult education program) will open as usual today, after Brennan said inspections deemed the structures safe for students and staff to use.
On Friday, as many as 12 students suffered minor injuries when a corner of landing connecting two annex buildings gave way at the Beech Street School. The wooden platform is at the end of a ramp leading to the entrances for two of three annex buildings located south of the main Beech Street School building.
Brennan said Sunday night that investigators and crews from the city's Facilities Division were at the site late Friday and over the weekend; he expects to learn the cause of the collapse later today.
“I'm expecting to receive a report sometime (today), in time to review it with the School Committee,” said Brennan. “We will also have a meeting today with the teams that responded to the scene on Friday, everyone involved, to assess our response as a city and a district. We'll discuss what we did well, and what maybe could have been done better.”
Tonight's meeting of the Board of School Committee gets under way at 7 p.m. in City Hall.
Brennan said over the weekend that he estimates the ramps that collapsed were somewhere between 10 and 12 years old.
Paul Feely may be reached at pfeely@unionleader.com.
“Facilities personnel were out this weekend at schools that have portables and similar structures,” Superintendent of Schools Thomas Brennan said.
“The portables at these schools were identified as locations where minor work could be performed, so the decision was made to close the portables so Facilities crews can shore up the ramps. The plan now is to have them reopen on Tuesday. Until then, we'll find space within our school buildings to accommodate the students who would normally be in these portables. We don't want to take any chances with them.”
Brennan said the portables are at the Beech Street School, Northwest Elementary, and the Wilson, McDonough and Weston schools.
Portable units and ramps at the Jewett, Gossler Park, Green Acres and Hallsville schools, as well as the Manchester School of Technology (the adult education program) will open as usual today, after Brennan said inspections deemed the structures safe for students and staff to use.
On Friday, as many as 12 students suffered minor injuries when a corner of landing connecting two annex buildings gave way at the Beech Street School. The wooden platform is at the end of a ramp leading to the entrances for two of three annex buildings located south of the main Beech Street School building.
Brennan said Sunday night that investigators and crews from the city's Facilities Division were at the site late Friday and over the weekend; he expects to learn the cause of the collapse later today.
“I'm expecting to receive a report sometime (today), in time to review it with the School Committee,” said Brennan. “We will also have a meeting today with the teams that responded to the scene on Friday, everyone involved, to assess our response as a city and a district. We'll discuss what we did well, and what maybe could have been done better.”
Tonight's meeting of the Board of School Committee gets under way at 7 p.m. in City Hall.
Brennan said over the weekend that he estimates the ramps that collapsed were somewhere between 10 and 12 years old.
- - - - - - - -
Paul Feely may be reached at pfeely@unionleader.com.
- Updated: Car may have started itself, crashes, burns at Manchester Home Depot - 6
- Lightning strikes home in Exeter - 0
- Answers sought after bomb squad leaves Fitzwilliam - 0
- Nottingham man injured in wagon accident suing Hampton Falls orchard - 2
- Lightning strikes Manchester home, sparks fire - 0
- Asphalt truck overturns in Jaffrey - 0
- Police to educate Manchester motorists on distracted driving - 7
- Bird's nest may have caused house fire in Hudson - 1
- New Ipswich man burned in garage fire, flown to Boston - 0
Plaistow fire victim remains critical
READER COMMENTS: 0- NH Senate kills House-passed gas, tobacco tax hikes - 0
- Senate Finance Committee rejects Medicaid expansion - 5
- Man wielding pipe robs Cumberland Farms in Goffstown - 0
- Buchholz moves to 7-0 as Red Sox post win - 0
- Gambling bill scuttled, 'Now it is going to be really tough' for budget - 29
- NHIAA Roundup: BG girls’ tennis team sweeps Pinkerton - 0
- NHIAA box scores, summaries for May 22 - 0
- Officials say Goffstown High ‘safe’ after threat of violence - 1
- Manchester Community College graduates told ‘speak your minds’ - 0
65 mph OK for E-ZPass drivers with opening of new lanes at Hooksett toll plaza
READER COMMENTS: 0
Sorry, no question available



