Springfield Business Journal_2024-03-04

MARCH 4-10, 2024 SPRINGFIELD BUSINESS JOURNAL · 17 NEWS by SBJ Staff · sbj@sbj.net The Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors has endorsed two city ballot measures that are slated to appear before voters on April 2. The board unanimously voted in favor of endorsement on Feb. 20, according to a news release issued Feb. 26. The ballot measures involve the mayor’s term of office and code of ethics changes for city personnel. “The chamber board prioritizes taking strategic steps to tackle challenges that impact our business community,” said Brian Hammons, chamber board chair, in the release. “As we consider current recruitment challenges for both Springfield’s workforce and public servants, we believe these two measures will move the city in the right direction.” One of the city’s ballot measures would lengthen the term of future city mayors to four years from two while continuing to cap their service at eight consecutive years. The other would revise the city charter’s code of ethics policy for elected officials, appointed officers, board members and employees, according to past Springfield Business Journal reporting. The code of ethics measure would subject city employees who violate the code to disciplinary action up to and including termination. Current charter language provides only for termination for employees with an ethics violation. Elected officials, appointed officers and board members would still forfeit their position for a violation, as the current code dictates. The charter change also would require City Council to review its ethics policy every other year. In the release, Hammons said the code of ethics changes are a good start. “We strongly encourage the city to further evaluate the conflict-of-interest language to address all current issues that stem from this section of the charter,” he said in the release. “This measure is a step in the right direction, and we encourage further steps in the future.” The chamber board’s executive committee initiated a review of both ballot measures in January. The local issues task force, which assists the board in establishing policy decisions on ballot issues, also reviewed the measures. • A rendering from project architect Sapp Design shows the planned new school. by Geoff Pickle · gpickle@sbj.net The Springfield Public Schools Board of Education has approved the construction bid for the new Reed Academy building. The vote was 7-0 at the Feb. 27 board meeting in favor of accepting DeWitt & Associates Inc.’s nearly $40 million bid for the project. Travis Shaw, deputy superintendent of operations, told board members prior to the vote that with demolition work and property purchases combined with the contractor bid, the total estimate for the project is roughly $41 million, below the construction budget of $46.8 million. The total project budget approved by voters through the Proposition S bond issue is $59.5 million. “It’s going to allow us to have a healthy contingency budget,” Shaw said. “We do know that we’ll have change orders as we go through a two-year construction project.” DeWitt & Associates submitted the low bid out of two received on Feb. 20, Shaw said, noting there was a 1.5% difference between the two bids. He did not name the other bidder. Sapp Design Associates Architects Inc. is the architect for the project with a completion goal by early 2026, according to past Springfield Business Journal reporting. Construction is now slated to start with the bid approval. SPS previously purchased four parcels of land to the north of the existing Reed property amid demolition work last year. The site is located between Lyon and Campbell avenues, north of Atlantic Street. • SPS board approves Reed construction bid provided by SDAARCHITECTS.COM 3050 S. National 417.881.8822 M-F 9am - 6pm, Saturday 9am - 1pm LOCATIONS & HOURS: grovepharmacy.com Drop the Weight! Semaglutide is available as sublingual drops for weight loss. Under the tongue vs injection. Compounded in our lab. Prices starting at $110/month Prescription required Springfield chamber board endorses city ballot measures

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