The damaged PHS building is in the background. In the foreground are broken pieces of a sign that says "home of the pirates"

Perry County School District 32 received a long-awaited determination from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Thursday regarding its Public Assistance Grant application for tornado recovery at Perryville High School.

FEMA sent a letter to District 32 and Missouri’s State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) notifying that the damaged PHS building has qualified for “replacement” under the Public Assistance Grant.

The PHS building has met FEMA’s threshold for its “50 percent rule,” meaning the estimated cost to repair the damaged structure exceeds 50 percent of the estimated cost to replace the building. This determination will allow the District to request reimbursements based on estimated replacement costs rather than repair costs.

“This is the good news we have been waiting for,” said District 32 Superintendent Dr. Fara Jones. “This designation will allow us to receive a larger overall reimbursement from FEMA that we can invest in building a new permanent home for PHS.”

FEMA’s correspondence mentioned it is developing an estimate of eligible costs for the associated project, but did not give a timeline when that would be available. District 32 will communicate those estimates once they are received.

Any FEMA funding the District is awarded will not come in one lump sum. The District will receive gradual reimbursements after submitting documentation of expenditures throughout the construction process.

The FEMA designation is a significant boon for the District’s tornado recovery plan. The Board of Education recently approved a revised Proposition K.I.D.S. ballot measure that will go before voters during the August 4 Primary Election. Prop K.I.D.S. asks voters to approve an operating tax levy increase of $0.2215 per $100 of assessed valuation to generate $35 million for the PHS construction project.

The Board has established a $60 million budget for the PHS construction project. Alongside the $35 million from Prop K.I.D.S., the District plans to fund the remaining $25 million through contributions from insurance, District funds, and FEMA reimbursements. Architects are still working through specific designs to meet the proposed budget, but are planning a roughly 140,000 square-foot facility that would include 34 classrooms, a gymnasium, a library, and a multipurpose center.

“The Board has been working diligently with our construction and finance partners on a new plan after our April ballot issue fell short,” Dr. Jones said. “This updated Prop K.I.D.S. proposal significantly reduces the ask from taxpayers while still ensuring we can build a quality high school that will serve Perry County families for years to come.”