University of Pennsylvania vows $100 million to fix school building hazards

University of Pennsylvania announces it will contribute $100 million to the School District of Philadelphia for school building improvements.

The University of Pennsylvania has announced that it will contribute $100 million to the School District of Philadelphia over the next decade to deal with environmental hazards such as asbestos and lead in school buildings.

Officials said the contribution of $10 million each year for 10 years represents that largest private contribution to the school district in its history.

President Amy Gutmann said officials were proud to partner with the city and school district “to significantly improve the learning environment for Philadelphia’s schoolchildren in a way that will have a long-lasting impact on the health, safety, and wellbeing of our entire city."

Officials said the school district has since 2018 fully stabilized lead paint in 54 elementary schools, completed work to certify an additional 25 schools as lead-safe and invested more than $23 million to complete asbestos-related projects.

President Jerry Jordan of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, which represents public school employees, called it “an extraordinary day for our schoolchildren and educators."

___

RELATED STORIES

School District of Philadelphia puts hybrid learning plans on pause, will remain virtual

Philadelphia Teachers Union, district reach tentative agreement on new contract

46 new access centers open for Philadelphia students across the city

___

For the latest local news, sports and weather, download the FOX 29 News app.

DOWNLOAD: FOX 29 NEWS APP

Sign up for emails from FOX 29, including our daily Good Day Digest