District wins lawsuit; athletic bond still failing
Published 2:28 pm Thursday, October 2, 2008
CARNATION _ The month of November may turn out to be a
mixed blessing for Riverview School District No. 407.
According to the latest figures from the King County Records
and Elections Division, the district’s proposed $2.995 million bond to build
an athletic field and track at Cedarcrest High School in Duvall was failing
by less than four tenths of a percent. To be approved, the district needed
a supermajority, or 60 percent, of voters to OK the measure. As of Nov.
17, the measure had garnered 59.64 percent of the vote.
Final vote totals will be available Nov. 22 from the Records and
Elections Division.
But earlier in the month, the school district won a drawn-out legal
victory against the Georgia-based company that manufactured the Cedarcrest
High School roof and the architectural firm that designed it. On Nov. 2, a
jury awarded the district $1.2 million.
Riverview Assistant Superintendent Michael Green said the
district was more than happy with the jury’s decision.
“Elated would be the best word for it. I wasn’t surprised, though,” he said.
“It was obvious that we were a victim and not responsible for anything.”
In late 1998, the school district filed its lawsuit against
Loadmaster Systems Inc. of Norcross, Ga., and Burr Lawrence Rising + Bates
Architects of Tacoma in King County Superior Court. The trial lasted 20
days throughout the month of October, and the jury deliberated for several
hours before making its decision.
The roof the district had installed on Cedarcrest High School was
made of a steel deck, foam boards and a material like sheetrock that served
as the shingles. Green said it was the first roof the company manufactured for
a building in the Pacific Northwest, but since the construction of
Cedarcrest High School in 1994, other schools have contracted with the company.
And like Riverview, those other districts have witnessed problems.
“We know that there are failures of roofs in both the Kent and
Issaquah school districts that came out after our roof,” Green said.
The crux of the district’s lawsuit hinged upon the type of nail used
to install the roof. According to Green, the nail allowed pockets to form
where water could collect, which ruined portions of the roof.
Amid the frequent rains found west of the Cascades, water
“very slowly saturated large areas of that roof,” he said.
During the jury’s deliberations, members had to answer 19
questions before making their decision. Some of the questions include: Did
Loadmaster Systems Inc. breach an implied warranty that the roof-deck system
was fit for a particular purpose? [12 out of 12 jurors said yes] Was
[Burr Lawrence Rising + Bates Architects] negligent in its design of the
roofing system? [10 of 12 jurors said yes]
The jury then assigned Loadmaster 76 percent fault in the matter
while finding Burr Lawrence Rising + Bates Architects 24 percent at fault. It
also decided that Loadmaster had violated the state Consumer Protection
Act, which forces the company to pay the district’s legal expenses.
Depending on whether the two companies file an appeal, the
school district could see the money as early as January. Green said if
Riverview received the money before the end of school, it would start replacing
the roof over Cedarcrest High School next summer with a “membrane-like”
material impervious to water. He added the work would be completed
before the start of the 2001-2002 school year.
Both companies have 30 day from the jury’s decision to file an appeal.
