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Construction update: district reports $2.5M in direct material purchases and 52 active projects; multiple sites moving forward pending permits

Lee County School Board · January 14, 2026
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Summary

Construction staff told the board direct material purchases were about $2.5 million; regular change orders ~ $514,000; contingency adjustments were listed in project reports. Staff reviewed 52 active projects (34 on schedule) and gave project-level updates including Bayshore K-8, Bonita Springs Elementary, Cape Tech, Hector Caferetta, and sites awaiting Army Corps reviews.

Scott Rickenbacher, director of construction, and project coordinator Melissa Rivera presented the district’s November 2025 change-order and bimonthly construction update.

Rickenbacher said the front-cover figures show roughly $2.5 million in direct material purchases (with roughly $103,000 returned), approximately $514,000 in regular change orders, and contingency adjustments itemized per project in the supporting report. He described six direct material purchases across Hector Caferetta, Cypress Lake, Cape Tech and Bayshore K‑8 and summarized three pure change orders and two contingency adjustments tied to ESOM portable deployments.

The staff reviewed individual project status: Bayshore K‑8 tilt panels and tie beams are up, with a planned turnover of a front parking area for temporary parent drop-off; Bonita Springs Elementary is in final development-order review with corrected as‑built drawings submitted; Cape Tech and Hector Caferetta have roofs and utilities in place and interior finishes underway; Cypress Lake Middle is roughly 40% through interior framing with ongoing spray fireproofing. Staff reported 52 projects in the portfolio: 34 on schedule, 2 on hold, 5 in audit, 2 awaiting Army Corps actions and 9 in closeout.

Board members asked whether returned savings reflected overbidding or normal contingency savings; Rickenbacher explained buyout savings, labor efficiencies and project contingencies can produce contract reductions on smaller roof jobs. A board member asked about fencing projects; construction staff said fencing was handled by maintenance, not construction, and referred the board to the director of maintenance for schedule details.

No formal motions or votes were taken during the workshop update.