MARCH 17, 2017, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A5 KeizerCommunity KEIZERTIMES.COM District champs highlight choir concert By DEREK WILEY Of the Keizertimes Fresh off winning a pair of district championships and acceptance to the Rose City Sing-Off, McNary’s girls and boys a cappella groups, Some- thing Blue and Dangertones, will take the stage in the high school’s spring choir concert, Take Me Home, on Monday, March 20 at 7 p.m. in the Ken Collins Theater. Winning district wasn’t a surprise for Something Blue after capturing the Oregon Music Education Association state title in female vocal en- semble last year but they did feel the pressure to repeat. “It made me more ner- vous,” Ella Garro said. “We won last year so we’ve got to do just as good.” Madi Zuro, who is also in Something Blue, was a fi rst al- ternate in soprano voice. The rest of the a cappella group includes Sydnie Gould, Ca- rina Hodson, Veronica Reyes, Grace Condello, Camryn Runnow, Ingrid Dunn, Re- gann Donahue, Kennadi Thomas, Mary Dolenc and Jaden Brunhaver. They performed Mozart’s Ave Verum Corpus and This Little Babe by Benjamin Brit- ten. “She (the judge) said that she really liked our blend, which is what a lot of people say,” Garro said. “That’s our strength. She also loved our sopranos.” Dangertones, which didn’t even compete at districts last year, were surprised to win male vocal ensemble. The group, which includes McNary students Casey Pot- mesil, Briley Hill, Ashton Thomas, Logan Boga, Aus- tin Deng, Kyle Weltz, Erik Halvorson, Drew Faatz, Mat- thew Albright, Jacob Fritts and Dominique Williams per- formed Ave Maria and Ring of Fire by Johnny Cash for the judge. “You’re supposed to have two pieces and we had Ave Maria but we could not fi nd another one and we were al- ready working on that (Ring of Fire),” said Potmesil, who was also fi rst alternate in bass voice. “Traditionally, you wouldn’t do anything like that for solo ensemble but he (McNary choir director Joshua Rist) felt it meshed all our voices good enough. We’d only ever done pop literature. We hadn’t done classical stuff that you do for a contest like this. We didn’t ex- pect to make it to state.” Hill said it was Rist who encouraged the boys to com- pete at districts to begin with. “This is our fi rst year branching out,” Hill said. “It was Mr. Rist pushing us to do more. This year I feel like our potential shot through the roof, probably because of his support and us striving to do more.” The OMEA state competi- tion will take place April 28- 29 at Pacifi c University. “I guess we’re just going to see what happens,” Potmesil said. “We don’t really have any specifi c goals and we’re not KEIZERTIMES/Derek Wiley McNary’s boys and girls a cappella groups, Dangertones and Something Blue, will both perform during the high school’s upcom- ing choir concert on Monday, March 20 at 7 p.m. in the Ken Collins Theater. going to be sad if anything happens. We’re just going for the experience, I guess.” Dangertones and Some- thing Blue are just two of nine teams that will perform in the Rose City Sing-Off on April 8 at Imago Dei Community in Portland, and the only school with multiple groups. McNary’s a cappella groups will each perform three songs during the spring concert. The boys are doing My Girl, Ring of Fire and Right Round while the girls will perform This Lit- tle Babe, Bubbly and Ain’t No Mountain High Enough. McNary’s concert choir, Elektra, Celtic Men’s Chorus and the Classics will also per- form a wide range of songs. “In the program for the concert we’re just looking for an interesting arc of styles and feels and moods so we’re touching a little bit of every- thing,” Rist said. School board hears from facilities task force By HERB SWETT Of the Keizertimes Salem-Keizer School Dis- trict buildings in their pres- ent form will be short of space for 741 students in 2020, 1,307 students in 2025, and 1,861 students in 2035, School Board members heard Tuesday. Those are the projections at which a citizens’ facilities task force arrived for a pre- sentation to Tuesday’s board meeting. Michael Wolfe, dis- trict chief operating offi cer, opened the presentation, in which two other task force members, Mark Shipman and Lisa Harnish, participated. The report, which board members are studying for fur- ther consideration at a special meeting Tuesday, March 21, was discussed in detail for the McNary High School atten- dance area in several stories in the March 10 Keizertimes. Next week’s board meet- ing will be at the usual time and place, 6 p.m. at the Sup- port Services Center, 2575 Commercial St. SE, in Salem. Initial cost estimates for meeting future capacity and core infrastructure needs to- tal $443 million: $128 million for elementary schools, $49 million for middle schools, and $266 million for high schools. For elementary schools, the task force has found that 22 sites need capital con- struction additions and im- provements for capacity and core infrastructure. The infrastructure issues involve cafeterias, gymnasi- ums, common areas, libraries, and end-of-life (EOL) por- table classrooms. Eight middle school sites were found to need capital construction additions and core infrastructure improve- ments. Replacement of EOL portables at three schools is recommended. For high schools, the task force recommends increasing the capacity of each compre- hensive high school to 2,200 students except for 2,000 students at West Salem High School. This was found pref- erable to building a seventh comprehensive high school. Other initially projected costs are: • $123 million for building maintenance needs, accessi- bility in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and possibly consolidat- ing administration functions on one campus. • $12 million for moving the district’s data center out of a fl ood plain and expand- ing wireless networks. • $37 million for safety and security. • $56 million to $151 mil- lion for upgrading school buildings to meet seismic standards. The task force recom- mends a general obligation bond as the best possible funding source. In other business, the board approved eight grants, seven from the Oregon De- partment of Education. The remaining grant, $82,236 from Nike, is for AVID (Ad- vancement Via Individual Determination) expansion in McNary and other high schools. The board approved con- tracts for many teachers and administrators in the Mc- Nary and other attendance areas. It Feels Different Here COME SEE HOW MEMORY CARE & ASSISTED LIVING 4398 Glencoe St NE , Salem 503-581- 4239 TheSpringsLiving.com