Healthy Schools Heroes 2006  
Westborough (MA) parent Kathy King  
School Committee member Bruce Tretter
Every
 year to mark the anniversary of the March 18, 1937 Texas School 
Explosion, I salute Indoor Air Quality Heroes whose inspirational 
leadership protects children from school hazards and unhealthy school 
conditions. As many safety champions know, it often takes enormous 
persistence and courage to take leadership for safety in schools and 
overcome indifference to a wide range of health and safety problems.
My
 2006 Healthy Schools Heroes are Westborough (MA) School Committee 
member Bruce Tretter and parent Kathy King. Tretter and King have 
transformed the Westborough Public Schools into a unique model of 
district-wide responsibility, responsiveness and commitment to health 
and safety.
Tretter
 and King make safety and health a high priority, something that was 
overlooked when the burgeoning oil-rich East Texas boomtown built its 
new state-of-the-art school.
Today,
 69 years since the Texas School Explosion, its story should be part of 
our national legacy. Let's make March 18 a national day dedicated to 
bringing the "Lessons of the 1937 Texas School Explosion" to our 
nation's schools and celebrating the heroes whose leadership saves 
children's lives.
BEYOND TOOLS FOR SCHOOLS
Bruce
 Tretter calls Westborough's successful process, "Beyond Tools for 
Schools" because of its highly detailed IAQ Program Manual and the high 
level of support from school staff. The IAQ Program Manual is available 
online at no cost at www.westborough.org.
GETTING STARTED
The small Massachusetts community has come a long way.
Kathy
 King is the mother of Kellianne who suffered headaches, sinus 
infections, chest pains and seizures that were linked to a variety of 
indoor air quality problems and chemicals in her school. Once King 
realized the school was the source of Kellianne's symptoms, she spoke up
 early and persistently for the children of Westborough, confronting 
years of official denial and resistance.
King
 and another parent, Nancy Meany, a nurse, presented the school 
committee with over 500 signatures they had collected from parents and 
other community members, including senior citizens, to show support for 
adopting the US EPA IAQ Tools for Schools program.
Bruce
 Tretter was a relative newcomer to Westborough and had never heard of 
the term "IAQ" when the Hastings Elementary Schools was suddenly closed 
because of wide-spread upper respiratory symptoms among students and 
staff.
Later,
 when he heard Kathy King testify about her daughter's severe illness 
related to the Hasting's poor indoor air quality, he remembers thinking 
she was crazy. Finally, Tretter realized that she was making a lot of 
sense and they became allies. When Bruce saw that the school 
administration was slow to make changes, he got more involved.
Tretter
 served on the school council for two years (2000 and 2001) and then was
 elected to the Westborough School Committee in 2001. He pledged to 
improve school indoor air quality and specifically, to work on a 
district-wide monitoring program for the budget as well as for 
facilities. Tretter became and still is chair of the district's IAQ 
committee that has evolved into a comprehensive Facilities Committee.
IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO RAISE A CHILD
"Bruce
 has been a very important part of our village," says King. "Bruce saw 
the urgent need for change in the way Westborough managed its buildings 
and the way the administration communicated. He recognized that the 
countless health complaints of staff and students were valid and needed 
to be addressed properly."
"After
 finding out the facts about our schools' extensive IAQ problems and the
 stonewalling for over a decade, Bruce ran for school committee. Bruce 
took the IAQ issue to the max. He was not satisfied to stop when the 
minimum requirements of an IAQ team were met. He continuously looked for
 ways to make the teams more effective."
"The
 school children and staff now have the benefit of many watchful people 
in the village. They have site-based teams and a central team watching, 
inspecting, reporting, and fixing IAQ problems before they become health
 issues. These teams work very well with the administration, another 
very important partner in the village."
King's
 continued input on Westborough's Facility Committee and her ability to 
work with the media to promote Westborough's turnaround will inspire 
many others to speak up for changes in school design, operations and 
maintenance on behalf of children.
THE WESTBOROUGH MODEL
In
 the beginning Bruce Tretter and Kathy King looked far and wide for a 
school that had an authentic functioning model of the US EPA IAQ Tools 
for Schools program, but neither US EPA, the Massachusetts Department of
 Public Health, nor any of the healthy schools advocacy groups could 
provide one.
So,
 as part of Westborough's nascent Indoor Air Quality team, King and 
Tretter assembled a district-wide committee, including representatives 
from the state teachers' union. They set out to create a plan 
appropriate for all six of their district's schools and also readily 
adaptable by any school district in the nation.
The
 IAQ team sought input from the school staff and administration. The 
Massachusetts Teacher Association's training emphasized that the program
 would benefit everyone in all of the school buildings. In 2001-2002, 
the MTA also contributed their lawyer, Sarah Gibson, who helped make the
 program as comprehensive as it is today.
After
 a year of drafting and editing, the committee had a district IAQ manual
 complete with detailed building checklists, schedules and timelines for
 completing the checklists, building inspections, detailed 
responsibilities for follow-up and protocols for follow-up reports.
Tretter
 describes the program's first year as "slow going" because they didn't 
have a template or model to learn form. However, the process improved, 
especially with the interest and cooperation of the superintendent and 
the new school nurse.
IAQ IS A SHARED RESPONSIBILITY
Today,
 everyone in the Westborough School community shares a high sense of 
responsibility for making the IAQ plan work. The average classroom 
checklist completion rate across the district has been over 90% over the
 past three years. Rooms without a completed checklist are inspected by 
the individual school Health and Safety teams who conduct comprehensive 
inspections twice a year.
GOOD IAQ EQUALS GOOD PRESS
Eventually
 the Westborough School System's bad press changed to good press, 
especially after Westborough was recognized by the US EPA in 2003 for 
creating an IAQ program that featured district-wide awareness and a 
proactive approach.
In
 October 2005, Kathy and Kellianne King and the Westborough Schools 
exemplary turnaround were featured on ABC's Good Morning America, in the
 Boston Globe, and in other news stories around the country.
In
 the Good Morning America report: "Girl's Illness Traced to 'Toxic' 
School," Kellianne says, "I feel very proud to have a mom that would do 
that for her kid instead of just giving up...and not just for me but for
 other kids."
LEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE
A
 significant feature of Westborough's process is continuous improvement.
 The Facility Committee works to improve the checklist procedure. At 
first, staff members were asked to fill out separate autumn and spring 
classroom checklists. 
Later, staff members were reissued their completed
 autumn checklist and asked to note any changes on a condensed spring 
checklist. This new procedure reinforces awareness of room conditions 
noted previously. It also allows for a more accurate comparison season 
to season and contributes to the sustained high rate of checklist 
completion.
Each
 school's checklists are used to create a report about facility 
conditions and maintenance at each school. Following a review of the 
checklists, the district facility committee does extensive 
walk-throughs. Instead of meeting only in the central administration 
building, the committee holds district meetings in each of the school 
buildings on a rotating basis. This allows the committee to see first 
hand the problems cited in the report. They also see how repairs are 
going, for example, the remediation of a water infiltration/plumbing 
problem in the recently constructed Mill Pond School.
There
 are also many examples of the school systems heightened responsiveness.
 Teachers fill out maintenance requests regularly. When diesel fumes 
from idling equipment in an attached garage space were getting into the 
school, the principal stopped it immediately. In the new K-3 school, the
 architect designed the room for the copy machine to vent fumes into the
 school hall. Now the school is going to relocate the machine to a more 
properly ventilated location.
KEYS TO SUCCESS
Tretter identifies three keys to IAQ success: persistence, awareness and communication.'
Persistence
 was required to bring all parties on board and to implement the plan 
and to keep improving it. Now everyone understands that continuous 
vigilance is required to ensure the system responds appropriately to 
practical operational needs as they arise.
Awareness:
 At first some staff members expressed con-erns that the IAQ plan was 
creating a program only to address problems at one school. However, 
staff learned that IAQ problems can arise in any building and that 
proper prevention and mitigation of problems relies on properly trained 
and prepared staff.
The
 program has proven its value in responding to indoor air quality 
problems at other schools, especially those undergoing construction and 
renovation projects. Although unforeseen at the outset, the awareness of
 IAQ solutions, especially the importance of building maintenance, has 
been especially appreciated as the district has budgetary constraints.
Communication:
 Problems are shared, not hushed up. From the beginning, the program 
depended on comprehensive, straightforward and open communication among 
all members of the school community.
Everyone
 knows that the future success of the program depends on maintaining 
good communication among the district facilities committee, each 
school's health and safety team and building staff, the school 
department and school committee. 
Communication maintains the benefits of
 the IAQ program even as committee members and school personnel change.
Implementation
 of Westborough's program has increased IAQ awareness so it is now a 
cornerstone of school and community culture. Westborough is a true model
 of success. Bruce Tretter is eager and willing to mentor other school 
districts.  
THERE IS A HERO IN YOUR AREA. 
It could be you!
Bring
 the Lessons of the 1937 Texas School Explosion to your school. In 
response to the growing number of accidents such as mercury spills and 
lab injuries, many states as well as the US EPA Schools Chemical 
Cleanout Campaign have created resources and programs to help schools 
conduct chemical clean-outs and to provide training to staff to 
implement the necessary chemical management programs. They can be allies
 and resources to anyone who takes leadership for school safety.
For other references and resources see What You Can Do online at www.healthy-kid.info.
 Find information and suggestions for school programs and events to 
improve school safety and security, plus links to national and state 
resources and model programs.
Let me know how it goes.
Ellie Goldberg, healthykids@rcn.com
March 01, 2006
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