KSD: Teetering on the edge of change (First Installment)

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Sunday March 4, 2007

KSD: Teetering on the edge of change

By TODD KLEFFMAN
tkleffman@amnews.com

Editor's note: This is the first installment in a series of stories about Kentucky School for the Deaf, its past and its future, the buildings and grounds as they exist and as they might change, those who worry about the changes and those who might benefit from them.

The view from the rarely visited cupola atop Jacobs Hall is birds-eye.

From there, the entire city of Danville unfolds in all directions, and the 160 acres of the Kentucky School for the Deaf campus comes into sharp focus.

To the south along Second Street, just below KSD's newest buildings, a wide belt of greenspace butts up against Bate-Wood Homes and spreads east all the way to Stanford Avenue.

Heading north back toward town, it rubs up to Admiral Stadium and Bate Middle School then moves west along Martin Luther King Boulevard to Third Street, where KSD's older buildings sit mostly unused and wasting away. You can see the spot where Cowan Hospital used to stand. It was razed for a parking lot last month.

Two blocks to the north is Main Street and the hubbub at the old Hub/Gilcher building and parking garage. Just across Third Street is the giant hole where the expansion of Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center is beginning to sprout.

"Look at this view," Paula Kilby, director of Danville-Boyle County Chamber of Commerce, exclaimed from the cupola. "Wow!"

That Kilby and Heart of Danville Director Julie Wagner, major cogs in Danville's wheel, were touring Jacobs Hall last week was a harbinger of a growing interest in KSD's future.

It was the first time that Wagner had set foot inside the building that celebrates its 150th birthday this year and is the embodiment of deaf history and culture in Kentucky.

"I'm embarrassed," Wagner admitted.

Her curiosity was sparked by a Kiwanis International luncheon earlier at which KSD operations officer Larry Conner made an appeal for greater community involvement with the campus and its students.

"We've got a lot of needs here, and we can use community support," Conner said. "I just don't think the community and the school have forged a strong relationship."

Not that Conner was pointing fingers. It's just that as KSD's stature has shrunk along with its enrollment, the campus has become almost like an island unto itself in the middle of Danville. Seen, perhaps, but not heard or thought much about.

A mere shadow of its former self

Today's KSD is a mere shadow of its former self. In the late '70s and early '80s, enrollment topped out at 440 students, most of whom lived on campus nine months a year or more and only went home once a month. The staff was 220 strong.

Current enrollment is 130 students. Most of the hearing-impaired students who used to go to KSD are now mainstreamed into public schools close to where they live.

About 75 of the current students stay in campus dorms, but only for a week at a time. They are bused in from far flung counties on Sunday evenings and bused back home on Friday afternoons.

The other 55 students are bused in daily from nearby school districts - some as far away as Bardstown and Frankfort - and return home each night. Staff numbers have dropped to 150.

That trend has long foreshadowed the need to retool KSD, but that change is only now beginning to happen. The metamorphosis will not only have a profound impact on the school and the students it serves, but also on the community it has called home since 1823.

What will become of the KSD campus isn't yet clear. The vision is muddied by a complicated mix of money, politics, a double layer of state bureaucracy, many strong opinions lacking consensus and a deaf community trying to cling to a history that is endangered.

Though KSD's history stretches back 184 years, you only have to go back to November 2004 to glimpse its future. That's when the state Department of Education, which operates KSD, approved a facilities plan that calls for the campus to shrink back to the area around its newest buildings along Second Street.

Under the plan, only five of KSD's 17 buildings are part of the downsized campus. The other 12 buildings on the upper side of Second Street and those on the Third Street side, including Jacobs Hall, are designated "transitional" with the "intent to surplus."

"Transitional means it's not part of the future campus, that it will be closed at some point," said Lisa Gross, spokeswoman for the state Department of Education.

That means that perhaps as much as 100 acres of what Kilby calls "prime real estate" near the heart of the city will become open for other uses. When and how that happens is a messy proposition that promises to be slow in its unveiling.

The facilities plan calls for new construction, add-ons and renovations to the cluster of remaining buildings. There will be a new 400-seat auditorium and outdoor athletic complex. Two entries to the campus will be redesigned to make it more secure. New, deaf-friendly technology will be added.

When the plan was completed more than two years ago, the price tag was $14 million to $15 million but since then has risen dramatically because of escalating construction costs.

Money for capital projects comes from legislature

Since KSD has no bonding authority and is state-owned, it must get money for capital projects from the legislature. When the idea was floated for funding during the 2006-07 budget cycle, it got lost in the shuffle.

"It was tossed out in the 2006 legislature, but nobody even sniffed at it," said Bill Melton, KSD's campus manager. "It was competing with the Louisville arena and projects at UK and U of L."

The project remains on the Department of Education's priority funding list that it is preparing for the 2008-09 budget cycle and Gov. Ernie Fletcher is aware of the need, Gross said.

But, so far, there is no sign that any coalition or political champion is emerging to push the matter to the forefront. And without funding, everything else is at a standstill.

"It all goes back to money. How do you get the wheels rolling without money?" Gross said. "That's not an excuse. There isn't anybody to point a finger of blame to. Money is tight everywhere."

Waiting on the powers that be in Frankfort to act is becoming increasingly frustrating for Melton and other KSD administrators who are trying to serve their students with buildings and infrastructure growing more decrepit by the day.

Since no money is going to be spent on buildings that are not part of future plans, it is a constant struggle to scavenge parts to fix heating and cooling systems and make deteriorating buildings serviceable.

It has been a constant game of musical chairs moving students and classes from one building to another while repairs or renovations are made.

"We are good at cannibalizing and recycling," said Melton, who came to KSD from Colorado School for the Deaf in 1980.

Last week, Conner watched in dismay as students in Grow Hall ate lunch with their jackets on because the heating system had conked out.

Campus is "out of sight, out of mind"

Such occurrences are par for the course at KSD, but nobody in Frankfort feels the chill when the heat goes out in Danville. The campus is "out of sight, out of mind" to the folks in Frankfort, Melton said, and KSD's plight remains "a back burner issue."

"I've been here for 27 years, and nothing has happened," he said.

To Melton's mind, tons of money and resources have been wasted over the years trying to maintain buildings and mow acres of unused property that KSD doesn't need. It's money that could have been put toward a newer, smaller campus of about 60 acres that would better serve deaf students and taxpayers.

"Why should we maintain all of this?" he wonders. "But I'm a nobody in this. I'm not a deaf person. I didn't go to school here. I'm not even a Kentuckian."

Rhonda Bodner is deaf. She grew up on farms in Parksville and Stanford and graduated from KSD in 1978. She now works in KSD's outreach department helping kids get hearing aids, ear molds and glasses. She's also vice president of the school's alumni association, so she has a good sense of the feelings held by the deaf community about KSD's future.

It is a heart-rending dilemma for those who attended KSD and love it like a familial home. It pits the needs of current and future deaf students against the storied history of the school that is so much a part of their culture and identity.

There is an understanding and desire for KSD to move forward coupled with an equally strong, almost uncompromising emotional pull to preserve the heritage, Bodner said, while acknowledging that having it both ways is not a realistic outcome.

"We have to save the old because that's what the deaf people want. Kids have been coming here since 1823, and these buildings tell their stories. There will be a lot of hurt if they are gone because they carry the memories, the traditions, the stories," she said.

"But we have to have better education for the deaf kids of the future. That's very important, more important than the past."

As campus property is surplused

The language of the 2004 facilities plan recommends that as campus property is surplused, uses be found "that would support the education and interests of deaf citizens," but does not include any funding to that end.

Several ideas have been tossed out - a transition home for graduates not ready to enter the work-a-day world, beefed up vocational training, a home for the alumni association, a social club.

But there have been no serious proposals put forward for consideration, and there is no indication at this point, absent some generous benefactor, that the deaf community will muster the consensus and funding needed to salvage any building other than Jacobs Hall, which everyone agrees will be preserved.

Further complicating matters is the fact that all of KSD is owned by the state and the Finance Cabinet must be involved in any deals involving surplus properties.

There are multiple deeds to the campus, perhaps 20 or more, and many of them are believed to restrict the use of the property to the purpose of deaf education, said Jill Midkiff, spokeswoman for the Finance Cabinet.

With so many hoops to jump through at so many levels, and so many concerns and sensitive issues in the mix, it is no wonder so little is happening so slowly. Even after the funding materializes to downsize the campus, a veritable obstacle course will still have to be negotiated before it all settles out.

"We are approaching this very cautiously," said Gross at the Department of Education. "We're open to any options. There aren't any doors that are closed. We just don't want to rush anything. You can't just go in there and make rash decisions based on economics. It's a very complicated situation."

Despite those complications, baby steps are being taken toward the future.

Ephraim McDowell positioning itself

Ephraim McDowell Health, which is positioning itself to be a key player in whatever happens at KSD, signed a three-year lease with the state for $120,000 to use campus space for parking.

Included in the deal was the demolition of the old Cowan Hospital, which McDowell also paid for.

"There wasn't a whole lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth" when Cowan was razed three weeks ago, Melton observed.

Danville Board of Education, which also has a keen eye on KSD property, recently has made overtures to the state about buying Barbee Hall on Martin Luther King Boulevard, where board offices have been located for two years. The state has yet to respond to the inquiry, Superintendent Bob Rowland said.

Add in the visit by Kilby and Wagner to Jacobs Hall and the fact that KSD was a major topic during last week's community planning forum sponsored by the Economic Development Partnership, and there is a sense that the big ball is starting to roll.

"There are any number of reasons doors could be closed because it's so much of a hassle, but I'm optimistic that, with persistence and for the right reasons, there can be a good outcome for KSD and the community as a whole," said Harry Nickens, McDowell's vice president for community relations.

Amnews.com
 
KSD: Campus landmark deemed surplus for future (Second Installment)

Monday March 5, 2007

KSD: Campus landmark deemed surplus for future

By TODD KLEFFMAN
tkleffman@amnews.com

Editor's note: This is the second installment in a series of stories about Kentucky School for the Deaf, its past and its future, the buildings and grounds as they exist and as they might change, those who worry about the changes and those who might benefit from them.

After Kentucky School for the Deaf's homecoming basketball game on Feb. 24, there was an open house for 350 alumni at Jacobs Hall that included tours of the deaf history exhibits on the seldom visited second and third floors.

The event was scheduled for two hours, from 6 to 8 p.m., but that wasn't nearly enough time. Folks lingered telling stories among the artifacts, like the green football inscribed: "K.S.D. 1962. Kentucky's only unscored upon team. Unbeaten. Untied."

Nobody wanted to leave the glory days.

"We couldn't get them out," said Rhonda Bodner, a 1978 KSD grad and vice president of the school's alumni association.

Nearly everyone has sentimental feelings about their alma mater, but that attachment is amped up considerably among KSD grads, especially the older ones who spent more time on campus than their own homes and made friendships closer than sibling bonds.

And there is no bigger magnet for that passion than stately Jacobs Hall, which will celebrate its 150th birthday later this year. It invariably is described as the very symbol of deaf history and culture in Kentucky.

"It's like Mecca," said campus manager Bill Melton. "It would be criminal if anything happens to Jacobs Hall."

Bodner, who grew up in Parksville and Stanford, added, "It's the No. 1 thing we are keeping our eye on."

Future of Jacobs Hall uncertain

That's because the future of Jacobs Hall is uncertain. It is among the 12 older buildings not included in plans by the state Department of Education, which operates KSD, to substantially downsize the campus as soon as the legislature commits the money.

KSD's enrollment has dwindled from 440 students to 130, and many of the older structures have been unused for years. Some have fallen into states of disrepair ranging from unsalvageable to "needs a quite a bit of work."

The proposed new campus would be centered around the five newest buildings on the east side and lower end of Second Street. The oldest buildings - including Jacobs Hall - between Second and Third, and those on the east side of Second Street nearest downtown, have been labeled "transitional" by the state, meaning they will be declared surplus when the campus is downsized.

The fate that awaits those surplus buildings is up in the air. Anything from the wrecking ball to preservation for deaf-friendly uses is possible. But everyone from state bureaucrats to politicians to the impassioned deaf community agrees that Jacobs Hall is untouchable. Though it sits a block away and on the opposite side of Second Street from KSD's future, it will be protected and remain as the spiritual and historical heart of the campus.

"There is no question that Jacobs Hall must be preserved and maintained," said Rita Zirnheld, KSD's interpreter coordinator who, although hearing, grew up on the campus where both her mother and father worked.

"It's rich history is embedded in the town of Danville and deaf education and the deaf community."

It is a Registered National Historic Landmark


Indeed, Jacobs Hall is not merely listed on the National Register of Historic Places like countless other structures in the region. It is a Registered National Historic Landmark, so designated by the federal Department of the Interior in 1966 for its "exceptional value in commemorating and illustrating the history of the United States."

It joins Ephraim McDowell House, Perryville Battlefield and Shaker Village as the only sites in the area - and among 30 in Kentucky - to be so honored.

Jacobs Hall is widely considered to be the first building in the country designed specifically for deaf uses.

Its interior focal point is a massive, open cylindrical upshaft that rises from the middle of the ground floor up six levels to the cupola so that people on every floor can sign to each other.

It is named after John A. Jacobs Sr., who as an 18-year-old Centre College student, rode to Connecticut on horseback in 1824, a year after KSD was founded, to train under famed deaf education pioneers T.H. Gallaudet and Laurent Clerc.

Jacobs returned to the school a year later, became its third superintendent and served in that capacity until his death in 1869. He introduced an early form of sign language to the campus and wrote several textbooks for deaf students.

Jacobs Hall has served many functions in its 150 years. Superintendents lived on its second floor. Its grand meeting room has hosted many governors and other dignitaries. The third and fourth floors served as dormitories until the 1960s. Legend has it that famous napper Ronald Reagan caught 40 winks in one of the guest bedrooms during a campaign stop in 1979.

"There is a treasure trove of history there that most of the community isn't aware of," said Richard Trollinger, Centre's vice president for college relations and a board member of the KSD Charitable Foundation that helps fund summer and extracurricular activities on campus.

Cursory tour shows it to be in remarkable condition

But how that treasure can be preserved will be much debated in the future. A cursory tour recently by Heart of Danville Director Julie Wagner, a preservation specialist, showed Jacobs Hall to be in remarkable condition, structure-wise.

The basement, encased by two-foot thick stone walls, doesn't appear to be leaking. The foundation appears solid, with no noticeable sagging or tilt.

"It's in a lot better shape than the Hub Building was when we started on that," Wagner said of the ongoing renovation of that Main Street building.

While that's good news, it will still take millions to restore Jacobs Hall to its former glory. The upper floors have remained virtually untouched since they were abandoned as dorms 40 years ago.

An elevator and a climate control system fancy enough to preserve the historical documents, furniture and other artifacts of the deaf museum will be costly undertakings.

The state's plan recognizes the special significance of Jacobs Hall and recommends that "suitable accommodations" be made to preserve it, but it shies away from suggesting state money be used for that purpose.

"It is further recommended that (if possible) outside resources be obtained to maintain the facility, and that the Finance Cabinet and appropriate state authorities assist in assuring the preservation of this historic structure," the plan states.

Unlikely deaf community could raise needed resources

Bodner said that many in the deaf community hope the building can be saved and used solely by KSD or deaf-affiliated organizations but admitted it is unlikely that the deaf community could raise the kind of resources needed for such an undertaking by itself.

One idea calls for Jacobs Hall to be handed over to the state's Department of Parks, where there might be more money and know-how available to do it justice.

"There has been some talk that Jacobs Hall could be a state park and still belong to the deaf community at the same time," said Byron Wilson, a 1989 KSD grad who now teaches elementary students at the school.

"I like this idea because it would enable Jacobs Hall to be maintained regularly and be more widely recognized."

Wagner, though quick to defer to deaf wishes, envisioned Jacobs Hall could be shared with the community as a site for meetings, public agency offices and even wedding receptions, and, with good promotion, could add to the list of local historic tourist draws.

Wagner suggested that the building could be a magnet for plenty of federal grant money, but only if the state relinquishes control of Jacobs Hall. The feds won't send money to the state for such purposes, she said.

While Bodner of the alumni association has deep interest over the ultimate fate of Jacobs Hall, she has more immediate concerns. She's trying to raise funds to spiff up the place before the building turns the big 1-5-0 later this year. Plans call for little celebrations beginning with KSD's annual picnic in August, leading up the official birthday party in November.

"We need lots of money right now," she said.

Amnews.com
 
KSD: Should history be sacrificed to pay for new campus?

Monday March 5, 2007

KSD: Should history be sacrificed to pay for new campus?

By TODD KLEFFMAN
tkleffman@amnews.com

It must seem like deja vu all over again for those old enough to remember when Kerr and Dudley halls stood proudly on the Kentucky School for the Deaf campus.

Those two buildings, built in 1882, stood side by side-by-side with Jacobs Hall to form a stately, majestic triumvirate along Second Street that represented KSD in its fullest bloom.

Jacobs Hall remains, but Kerr and Dudley exist only in photographs and memories. They bit the dust in the 1970s, when the prevailing attitude was, as KSD Campus Manager Bill Melton describes, "Old was yucky, and new was better."

Now, the state Department of Education, which operates KSD, has a plan for a much smaller campus that doesn't include its 12 oldest buildings.

What will happen to those buildings is unclear, but many in the deaf community worry that history is doomed to repeat itself and a big chunk of the past will disappear. Again.

"We still miss old Kerr Hall and Dudley Hall," said Rhonda Bodner, a KSD grad and vice president of the alumni association.

The fact that hurt still lingers over the buildings gives some indication of the heavy emotional investment many KSD graduates and employees have in the school and its history.

"In a nutshell, it breaks my heart to see what is happening to KSD's campus. It is difficult to separate the state government needs to economically manage the campus and the rich, familial connection that the campus holds for its deaf students and staff," said Rita Zirnheld, KSD's interpreter coordinator for 13 years.

Though Zirnheld isn't deaf, she is very much a part of the deaf community. Her parents, James and Beulah Hester, who are deaf, met on campus and married, then had long careers at the school, her father as a teacher and mother as a houseparent in the dorm. Zirnheld was nationally certified as an interpreter at 19 and went on to get her master's degree in Deaf Education.

"Each piece of property, each building, each inch of its boundaries echoes stories and memories. Very few people know what it is like to literally grow up in an environment such as KSD offers," Zirnheld continued. "Unless you have experienced that, you cannot lay claim to 'understand' or empathize with the deaf community over the issue of downsizing their 'home.' The unity of deafness in and of itself is a strong bond and the basis of growing up together on campus compounds that unity."

Zirnheld's parents and Bodner attended a KSD that is much different than the one that exists today. Now, only 70 of the school's 130 students reside on campus, and they go home every weekend. Most deaf and hearing-impaired students in Kentucky now are "mainstreamed" into their local public schools.

But before 1975, public schools weren't obligated to provide education to deaf children. KSD was their only option for learning. Enrollment was regularly 300-400 students who came to campus to live nine months of the year, only going home once a month, if that often. Some even stayed during Christmas break.

KSD is home

Bodner, who grew up the only deaf member of her family on farms in Parksville and Stanford, began KSD as a first-grader in 1965 and graduated in 1978. She has worked on campus ever since and currently helps students with hearing aids and ear molds. To her, KSD is home and the friends she has made there are family. Ditto for many who attended KSD, she said.

"This is their home. They grew up here, lived here. They have stayed in contact after graduation," she said. "They have friends that remain closer than members of their own family."

Beside spending so much of their young lives together on campus, KSD students bonded to each other, the staff and the school itself because it provided a comfortable refuge from a hearing world that wasn't always kind. KSD was a social environment where they could communicate, grow and flourish with peers.

"When you are deaf, you want to be with people who can sign, who have implants," Bodner said. "It's a chance to be with other deaf people. You want to be with other kids like yourself."

Now, most of the buildings that hosted those warm feelings are in jeopardy. As enrollment has shrunk, they fell into disuse and then disrepair, some of them almost beyond hope of saving without someone like Bill Gates coming to the rescue. Just like Kerr and Dudley halls before them.

"The truth of the matter is that all of these historic old buildings have not been maintained, which has led to their destruction," Zirnheld said.

There is a desire to try to save at least some of the buildings for deaf-related uses. The state's plan calls for "ongoing communication" between the deaf community and the "decision makers" in Frankfort, and that it is "preferred ... to find building uses for surplus property that would support the education and interests of the deaf."

But the plan, which was approved more than two years ago, does not mention providing any money toward those ends. The state hasn't even committed to the more than $20 million needed to downsize the campus into newer, better buildings with newer, better technology.

Possible that about 100 acres of the campus could be sold

It is possible that about 100 acres of the campus, including those where the 12 surplus buildings stand - prime real estate in the heart of Danville - could be sold to help pay for the new campus.

That scenario would put the deaf community in a no-win situation: In order to provide the best education and experience for deaf kids in the future, so much meaningful history would have to be sacrificed.

Byron Wilson, a 1989 KSD grad who now teaches at the school, still hopes a way will be found to mesh the school's history with its future.

"If the buildings and property can't be saved for deaf uses, I would like for them to be used by other schools such as Eastern Kentucky University and medical schools and possibly establish a partnership with KSD that would allow KSD students to be part of their programs," Wilson said. "I do not want the surplus property being used for mini shopping malls and residential housing."

But to Wilson, the first priority should be the future, not the past.

"If I was in control of KSD's future, I would make sure the approval of KSD's new campus is followed through. KSD's new campus plan would make KSD a much more attractive place for Kentucky's deaf and hard of hearing children to go."

Amnews.com
 
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