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Manassas Public Schools HQ at 8700 Centreville Road

The Manassas City School Board is asking the city council to allow it to spend nearly $11 million on the largest office building in Manassas.

With the purchase, the city council threatens the school board to categorically fund the school division in future years if it doesn’t start constructing a new Jennie Dean Elementary School before July 2025. Historically, the city council — which funds the school system due to the school board’s lack of taxing authority — has given a lump sum of cash to pay for school operations, no questions asked.

A new Jennie Dean Elementary School has been a sticking point between the school board and city council, which voted to raise taxes to fund the new school put on the back burner. In contrast, the school division focused on other projects like the purchase of 8700 Centreville Road.

This year, the city council transferred $139 million to the school division, about 55 cents on every dollar the city collected. The school transfer is the largest allocation in the budget.

Last year, the city council entertained purchasing 8700 Centreville Road, which houses Apple Federal Credit Union and several other businesses. The public school division leases a portion of the building to house its administrative office.

The city council held public hearings on the matter in September and October. Few people spoke during the public hearing.

The school said it will use the 56,000-square-foot building that opened 24 years ago, to house its central office, and use the additional space for future programs at the school division headquarters, like career and technical education and daycare, explained school board members.

On Monday, the city council’s proposal would require the schools to house the city’s social services offices and a customer service center for the city’s utility office, where residents may pay utility bills. A new customer service center is now housed in a former DMV at Godwin Drive, and Gateway Boulevard does not have a window for utility payments.

The school board ditched a plan to occupy the old police station on Wellington Road — a structure the city already owns — and complained the building is too small for its needs. It’s unclear what will happen to the old police station now that the department is relocated to a new public safety center on Grant Avenue.

The school division would become a landlord for the existing businesses inside the building until the business leases expire. In November 2023, PLN was there when city council members met the school board with a lukewarm reception when it pitched the idea.

You can read more about the potential transaction here in city documents. The Manassas City Council will take up the matter on its Monday, February 27 meeting, starting at 5:30 p.m. at Jennie Dean Elementary School, 9601 Prince William Street in Manassas.

More than 7,500 students attend Manassas City Public Schools.

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Police announced the arrest of a suspect in connection to a bomb threat that prompted administrators to bar doors at schools in the Manassas area on January 26, 2023.

Police learned of the first bomb threat at Unity Reed High School (formerly Stonewall Jackson Senior High School) at 8820 Rixlew Lane near Manassas. While investigating the incident, officers learned about a similar threat at Osbourn High School in Manassas.

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New police car design for Manassas 150th anniversary in 2023

Updated 5:45 p.m. -- Manassas police said city officials did a good job communicating with the public during a lockdown at several schools last week.

Just before 1 p.m. On Thursday, January 26, 2022, administrators placed Osbourn High School and two other schools, Baldwin Intermediate and Elementary schools and Metz Middle School, into "secure the building" mode, where no one could enter or exit the building while instructors continued teaching.

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Manassas City School Board member Lisa Stevens

Manassas City Public Schools have become the first in the region to scan students for guns and other weapons.

The city school board, on Tuesday, December 13, voted to spend $436,000 to install four new security scanners and cameras at Osbourn High School, the city's only high school. Known as Evolv Express Lanes, the scanners are common at sporting events and concert venues.

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Manassas City Councilman Mark Wolfe and city school board members Jill Spall and Alex Iqbal at a joint meeting on November 21, 2022.

Elected officials in Manassas had it out last night over efforts to build a replacement for Dean Elementary School and the school board's request to buy the largest office building in the city.

At issue is the school board's request of the city council, which funds the public schools, to reallocate $11.5 million of its budget so it can purchase 8700 Centreville Road, a four-story office building in the city's most densely-populated commercial corridor. The school division already rents space in the 33-year-old, four-story building.

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Photo: Prince William County Public Schools

Prince William County Public Schools are also considering metal detectors at its schools to improve student safety.

Last spring, the school division hired an outside expert to audit our safety and security practices. It's also looking at the safety practices of schools nationwide.

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Universal Orlando Resort testing Evolv contactless security scanners in 2020 [Photo: @UniNewsToday/Twitter]
The Manassas School Board is considering installing metal detectors at Osbourn High School.

The devices, called Evolv Express Lanes, would allow some 2,000 students to be searched for weapons as they enter the city's only high school. The machines are standard at some theme parks and sports stadiums.

Four scanners would be installed in the foyer areas of the school at the cost of $436,000. Osbourn High School would be the first in the region to have metal detectors.

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