
Posted on Sat, Aug. 17,
2002
BY STEVE HARRISON
sharrison@herald.com
The building inspector at
Riverside Elementary was pulled off the job Friday, after her
critical reports slowed a mold and mildew cleanup project by requiring some
repairs
to be ripped out and redone.
Maria Luisa Rouco said Friday
that she was moved so another inspector could sign
off on the job in time for the Aug. 26 start of school -- whether it's ready
or not.
''They needed to get me out of the way,'' she said.
Rouco's boss, Bob Goode, denied that, saying her move is only temporary.
A series of reports by Rouco
had described the work at Riverside as hasty and sloppy
-- a charge construction officials deny. Among the problems cited by Rouco:
New
insulation covering wallboard that is still contaminated with mold and mildew.
She flunked parts of the project in reports Wednesday and Thursday.
On Thursday, a group of
angry Riverside parents -- who hadn't read the inspection reports
-- met with school officials who promised the Coral Springs school would be
made safe
before children and teachers return. Many parents say the mold and mildew have
made
their children sick.
The biggest problems at the Coral Springs school are in the cafeteria and the media center.
The district is also working
through the weekend to clean mold and mildew at Country Isles
Elementary in Weston, which Rouco also inspects. Goode said Rouco can't work
both jobs
during this busy weekend, and she was put on Country Isles because it is closer
to her
Miami-Dade home, Goode said. She'll be back at Riverside next week.
Rouco said much of the Riverside work will be finished this weekend.
''It will be too late next week,'' she said.
Another inspector, Irv Tutunick,
will inspect Riverside this weekend. He lives in North
Broward and was the inspector for Park Lakes Elementary, under construction
in
Lauderdale Lakes. That school also has had mold problems. Tutunick hasn't worked
on Riverside's $2.5 million cleanup.
Rouco is one of the school
district's toughest inspectors, and has rankled school
officials, who believe she is overzealous. She and two other inspectors are
also suing
the school district, claiming they were punished for reporting violations at
other schools.
That case is ongoing.
Board member Stephanie Kraft,
who represents the troubled school, said she was
surprised that Rouco was moved off the job.
''`She's been making trouble
for them,'' Kraft said. ``I don't know how much of that is
warranted, how much of that is not warranted.''
The school district's building
inspectors have been in flux this summer, since chief
building official Alan Gilbert resigned in early July after only four months
on the job.
Gilbert -- whose job was
to make sure schools were built safely -- said he had trouble
working with some of his inspectors, including Rouco. He also said he was pressured
by school officials to open projects before they were ready.
One such project was a classroom
addition at Norcrest Elementary that opened two
weeks before the end of school in May, even though a fire hydrant nearest the
classrooms wasn't hooked up, among other problems.
Goode is now the chief building official since Gilbert resigned.
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