Five NC School Districts receive millions in construction grants

Bladen, Carteret, Catawba, Cleveland and Harnett counties were selected to receive funds

N.C. Superintendent of Public Instruction Mark Johnson listens to questions during a committee meeting at the General Assembly. File photo

RALEIGH — Five North Carolina public school districts in economically distressed areas will be receiving millions in construction grants according to outgoing N.C. Superintendent Mark Johnson.

Around $60 million in grant funds will be disbursed to the districts from the Needs-Based Public School Capital Fund for construction of new school buildings.

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“This is the fourth year and the second time this year that these funds have been made available to benefit our students and educators who have had to deal with outdated facilities,” Johnson said in a press release. “These grants will help address our state’s need to replace old, outdated schools with better learning environments.” 

The General Assembly created the Needs-Based Public School Capital Fund using a combination of revenue from the North Carolina Education Lottery and a local dollar match. In Tier 1, the most distressed areas, the match is $1 for every $3 in grant funds. In Tier 2, the match is one-to one. The maximum grant amount per project is $15 million in Tier 1 counties and $10 million in Tier 2 counties.

The five districts are Bladen, Carteret, Catawba, Cleveland and Harnett. Johnson’s press release included the following dollar amounts and details of the construction projects planned in each area:

Bladen County: $15 million to build a new pre-K through 8th grade middle school to replace two existing schools and combine them on one campus. The buildings to be replaced include a middle school that is 100+ years old and a primary school that is 69 years old ($22 million total project cost).  

Carteret County: $10 million to build new classrooms, dining, science, band and gymnasium at West Carteret High School; a new multipurpose gymnatorium at White Oak Elementary School; new classrooms and gymnasium at Croatan High School; a new gymnasium at East Carteret High School; and a 14-classroom addition at Broad Creek Middle School ($24.6 million total project cost).  

Catawba County (Newton-Conover City Schools): $10 million to build a new academic wing at Newton-Conover High School to replace a building that was originally constructed in 1964 ($20.8 million total cost).  

Cleveland County: $15 million to build a 900-seat auditorium on the campus of Burns High School and a new 900-seat auditorium at Crest High School ($20 million total cost).  

Harnett County: $10 million to build a new Northwest Harnett Elementary School to accommodate a 950-student enrollment capacity. The school will be pre-K through 5 ($37.5 million total project cost).  

The Needs Based Public School Capital Fund has awarded a total of $358.9 million to 31 local school districts since 2016. Projects funded include replacement of 31 existing schools and creation of 36 new schools or school buildings.

About A.P. Dillon 1442 Articles
A.P. Dillon is a North State Journal reporter located near Raleigh, North Carolina. Find her on Twitter: @APDillon_