Superintendent reports unresolved water and meal-service problems at Lower Elementary and junior high

North Pike School District Board of Education · December 5, 2025
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Summary

The superintendent told the board that persistent low water pressure, sand and debris in toilets, and recurring dining/phone-line issues at district schools remain unresolved; the district has spent about $50,000 patching the problems and will obtain new quotes and may invite the water association to meet with the board.

The superintendent told the North Pike School District board that persistent water problems at the Lower Elementary remain unresolved and sometimes have required canceling classes.

"The water issues at the Lower are still, not fixed," the superintendent said, describing days with inadequate pressure and instances when toilets would not flush. The superintendent said staff brought in Ross Jackson to investigate and that the district suspects the problem originates with the North Pike Water Association rather than the district's systems.

The superintendent described operational impacts: sand and debris in toilet fixtures have required repeated replacement of flush valves. "There's a lot of sand and debris in those toilets," the superintendent said, adding that the district has spent money replacing flush valves and that those repairs add up to lost staff time and expense.

To diagnose the source, the superintendent said the district would do "some things that will take just a little bit of money and a couple thousand dollars or so" to try to prove whether debris is coming from the water association side. The superintendent said the district may ask the water association's president to meet with the board to discuss the problem.

The superintendent also reported a separate ongoing problem at the junior high described in the transcript as "dinner time at the junior high," noting that prior quotes for fixes included new phone lines and that district staff expect to gather updated quotes and pursue a longer-term solution. "We've spent, somewhere around $50,000 or so over the years just kinda patching it," the superintendent said.

Board members were not recorded offering rebuttals from outside parties during the public session. The superintendent recommended follow-up steps including obtaining firm quotes, spending a modest diagnostic amount to identify the source of the water debris, and possibly inviting the water association to a future meeting.