A deal that made it possible for the Stillwater school district to move ahead with plans for a new Andersen Elementary school in Bayport was questioned Monday night when the sellers of the 10-acre parcel where the school is to be built said their terms aren’t being met.
St. Croix United Church expected to have access to an outdoor classroom on the school property where they could continue holding summer services on Sunday mornings, church members told the city Planning Commission. A city stipulation that the road to the outdoor classroom be for emergency vehicles only means church members would have to walk some 300 feet, a challenge for some, said Paul Spilseth, a church member.
“We have a fair number of elderly and handicapped people,” Spilseth told the Planning Commission.
The Planning Commission voted to advise the City Council at their Nov. 4 meeting to look for a creative solution, but it’s not yet clear what that could be, City Administrator Matt Kline said. The city wants the roadway restricted to emergency vehicles, and if some people started driving on it to access the outdoor classroom, it would encourage others to do so and lead to problems with parked vehicles blocking emergency crews. It’s also a security concern if people started driving to the back of the school, he said.
For many reasons, “it should remain closed to all traffic,” said Kline, who said the direction came from several levels of city staff.
The church this summer sold its 10-acre parcel of land so the school could be built, a move that “saved” the school, according to Planning Commission Chairwoman Elizabeth Kelly.
“St. Croix United saved your school,” Kelly told school district officials who attended Monday night’s meeting. She said the bond referendum that passed last year in support of the school’s construction might not have been approved if the district had stuck to its original plan of building on Barker’s Alps Park in Bayport, a move that had drawn local opposition from people who didn’t want to lose the public space.
The church bought the land in 1994 for a new church but never moved forward on the plan. The land has been carefully tended by church members, who built a memorial garden and labyrinth on it and cultivated native species of plants. They called it People’s Park and used it for outdoor services in the summer.