OAK RIDGE — Oak Ridge Military Academy is trying to partner with an investor in a deal that would rescue the cash-strapped school from closure, the school’s president said Tuesday.
If the deal goes through, Roy Berwick said the investor would absorb most of the academy’s debt — about $4.8 million — and infuse the school with additional money to stay open.
He declined to elaborate or name the investor, saying the school had signed a confidentiality agreement.
“This is very serious for us,” Berwick said. “I’m not going to mess it up because I have a big mouth.”
Berwick called the proposed deal “a long-term fix” that would bring stability.
The 158-year-old academy is coming off one of its most difficult academic years. Oak Ridge’s enrollment this year was about 130 students, a 12 percent drop over the previous year and well off its peak of about 300 in the 1990s. The school also faced a significant decline in giving and the ongoing burden of a $4.8 million debt on an academic building that opened in 2001.
In April, about 45 faculty and staff members agreed to relinquish about five weeks of salary.
In May, Oak Ridge officials laid off 11 workers and decided to end school a week early.
Berwick said the proposed deal would enable the school to pay its employees their back wages. “That’s very important to us that they be the first ones paid,” he said. “They’ve been very loyal and understanding to us.”
Discussions about the potential partnership have been under way since last month, Berwick said. He said the school would likely shut down this summer unless the deal goes through or a benefactor steps forward.
“This needs to happen and it needs to happen quickly,” he said.
Berwick also said he met with Stan Kowalewski this month about the former Northern Guilford High School basketball coach taking a similar position at Oak Ridge.
Berwick said the talks were “very rough and very preliminary.”
He said Guilford County Schools’ investigation into Kowalewski and his basketball program remain an issue with Oak Ridge Military Academy and its executive committee.
“It’s an issue that has to be resolved before we go any further in our discussions,” Berwick said.
Kowalewski said Tuesday he wanted to know what direction the school was headed before exploring a possible job there.
Contact Robert Bell at 373-7055 or robert.bell@news-record.com
Contact Don Patterson at 373-7027 or don.patterson@news-record.com
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