Fall 2002
Contents

Message From the Executive Director:
* Beyond trees in parking lots

Articles:
* The 2000 Census numbers are in:
What they tell us about the Upstate

* Upstate Forever should be embraced
* Conference on the "Z Word"
is a great success!

* Restoring and protecting trout waters
in the Upstate

* Dorman HS: A casualty of "The Growth Beast"

Upstate Forever News:
* Field trips
* Volunteers
* Staff and Board

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dorman High School: A Casualty of
"The Growth Beast"


The old Dorman High School: Going, Going, Gone.

As elsewhere in the South, the growth beast recently has pointed its flinty claw at Spartanburg County. A year from now, on the city’s west side, a new Super Wal-Mart will splay its massive parking-lot feet over ground occupied for 30 years by Dorman High School.
     Does it matter that a normal-sized Wal-Mart now stands less than a quarter-mile away? No, not in the tiny reptilian brain of the beast.
     It must make good business sense. A big-box developer spent a cool $15.5 million for the school grounds, and the school board took part of the money and bought almost 300 acres of woodland and field deeper in the county.
     Soon the growth beast will waddle out to this new site, an interchange of rural highway and interstate along the flood plain of the Tyger River, one of the area’s cleanest streams.
     The new Dorman complex is an educational brontosaurus itself, an out-of-step-with-the-times “mega-school,” where the grounds are bounded on two sides by four-lane highways, and the only approach is by car and bus. The once-forested site, scheduled for completion next fall, will include a new high school, middle school, district office and athletic facilities. It’s so big that school officials are calling their $70 million complex a campus.
     The absurdity of the new school’s day-to-day logistics is the point of much talk around town: Art teachers will travel by auto between classes at the high school and middle school, and students will shuttle in buses like airport commuters between the middle school and the distant athletic fields for physical education.

DID YOU KNOW...

That the 292-acre campus at the new Dorman High School is more than 3 WestGate malls (88 acres), two Wofford Colleges (140 acres), four Converse Colleges (70 acres) and 12 Spartanburg Regional Medical Centers (25 acres)?
(Spartanburg Herald-Journal, June 14, 2002)

That in 1995 two developers bought the property where the new school is located for $1.5 million and then sold it 3 years later to the School District for $2.4 million?
(Spartanburg Herald-Journal, Aug. 5, 2002)

That a developer purchased the site of the old school for $15.5 million and that the price tag for the new school exceeds $70 million, for a net cost to the taxpayers of about $55 million?
(Spartanburg Herald-Journal, Aug. 5, 2002)

That the old site consisted of 70 acres, which was plenty of room to accommodate all of the high school’s future needs?

     Those of us who opposed the high school’s sellout and resettlement think the move seeds yet another piece of Spartanburg County for sprawl. The infrastructure costs, much of which will be paid over years in state and county taxes, are massive. Added to
the cost of the new school and its grounds, the roads, interchanges, water and sewer will total a staggering $127 million. And the school will draw much more traffic down U.S. 221.
     When it opens, there will be 6,000 trips per day associated with the school, creating a traffic nightmare usually reserved for a Wal-Mart parking lot.
     The Dorman loyalists in favor of the district’s relocation see the project as an opportunity to create a “super-school” for 2,600 students (grades 9-12) closer to the center of their rural school district. A shiny, new school will build pride, and increasing size to many is no minor issue–it will make Dorman more competitive in sports.
     Overlooked, it seems, are the true costs of growth, which outweigh many of the perceived educational gains. These costs have caused “school sprawl” to become a hot topic in the countrywide public debate.
     The National Trust for Historic Preservation has published a report called Historic Neighborhood Schools in the Age of Sprawl: Why Johnny Can’t Walk to School. It notes that “across the country, parents are clamoring for smaller, community-centered schools on the basis that they are better for the kids and better for learning.”
     Out on the west side of Spartanburg, some apparently recognize sprawl’s harms. Real estate signs already have begun to pepper the highways in the area. These folks must know what is on the horizon, development kudzu the likes of which many locals have never seen: new subdivisions, strip malls, lube shops and fast-food restaurants filling up fields, pine plantations and hardwood groves as they inch in on the flood plain of the Tyger.
     I wonder if the Dorman school board considered that South Carolina is losing 70,000 acres of open space each year to development, the ninth-highest rate in the nation? I wonder if it bothered them that they disregarded the county’s non-binding comprehensive plan to help control growth? And I wonder if they realized that a mega-school might inherently teach students the negative values of overconsumption and bigger-is-always-better?
     “Rain follows the plow,” speculators told gullible pioneers headed west in the 19th century. “Prosperity follows asphalt,” say the 21st-century breeders of the growth beast. “If the lad or lass is among us who knows where the secret heart of this growth monster is hidden,” Gary Snyder writes in The Practice of the Wild, “let them please tell us where to shoot the arrow to slow it down.”

Upstate Forever Board member
John Lane teaches creative writing
at Wofford College. This article was written for Blue Ridge Press earlier this year and is reprinted here with permission.

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