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District 161 Approves Emergency Boiler Replacement, Cites Past Maintenance Failures

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Summit Hill School District 161 Meeting | December 17, 2025

Article Summary: The Summit Hill School District 161 Board has authorized the emergency purchase of two new boilers for Dr. Julian Rogus School at a cost exceeding $130,000, following a discussion about how “poor preventive maintenance” in previous years led to the early failure of existing equipment.

Boiler Replacement Key Points:

  • Total Cost: Each boiler costs approximately $53,000, with installation estimated at $12,500 per unit.

  • Grant Funding: A $50,000 state maintenance grant will be used to offset the total cost.

  • Failure Analysis: One boiler at Rogus School is completely down, and a second is failing; a warranty claim was denied by the manufacturer due to historical maintenance issues.

  • Future Oversight: The board’s Building and Grounds Committee will perform a “deep dive” in January into service contracts to prevent future premature equipment failures.

The Summit Hill School District 161 Board on Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2025, approved the emergency purchase and installation of two boilers for Dr. Julian Rogus Elementary School. The move comes as the district enters the coldest months of the year with its heating system in jeopardy.

Superintendent Dr. Paul McDermott informed the board that the manufacturer denied a warranty claim on one of the failing boilers. The denial was attributed to “poor initial preventive maintenance” that occurred before the current administration took over.

“In the event this [second] boiler fails, we will have limited options for in-person schooling,” McDermott said, noting that the district has already secured the new units on hold for immediate installation.

The total cost per boiler is $53,000, plus up to $12,500 for installation. The district will utilize a $50,000 matching grant from the state to lower the impact on the local budget.

The decision sparked a pointed discussion among board members about the district’s history with facility maintenance. Board member Patrick Oliphant, a chief engineer by profession, noted that similar issues occurred in 2022 with a cooling tower that failed after only three years of use.

“We’re up here asking to spend roughly $80,000 to replace boilers that were denied within their warranty because of improper maintenance,” Oliphant said. “This isn’t the first time we’ve run into this.”

Oliphant requested five years of historical maintenance data to build a “construct of what the environment looks like” and vowed to investigate the effectiveness of current service contractors.

“We need to start asking different questions,” Oliphant said. “Are they not telling us things that they are on the hook and responsible to tell us?”

The board expects the new boilers to be installed within the next 10 days.

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