Kent Center School eyes soccer field

KENT —Joe Wolinski, director of facilities at the private Kent School, attended the Board of Selectmen’s meeting Sept. 5 and submitted a proposal to revitalize the deteriorating soccer field at Kent Center School.  

“My proposal would move the soccer field about 50 yards to the south where there is more topsoil,� Wolinski said. “I could start in November and the initial work could be completed in about three weeks, after which the field would be left to sit for a year.�

The field, he said, “would need to be mowed, fertilized and watered during that time period and it would be ready to go in a year’s time.�

The abundance of topsoil in the new location would also allow the field to be expanded by about 120 yards; or, if it was better suited for the age groups using the field, by 100 yards.

Wolinski also noted that the relative paucity of topsoil at the current location would drive the cost of repairing it up to unrealistic heights.

“It would be better to bulldoze it and start over but that would cost too much, somewhere between $500,000 and $600,000.�

Wolinski also pointed to the high acidity found in soil samples at the current field, and the worn state of the grass that has now begun to give way and reveal the gravel beneath it.

The Board of Selectmen, Park and Recreation Commission and school board had been working together to find a feasible solution to correcting the soccer fields, which are becoming unsafe to play on. Wolinski seems to be offering just that with his plan, which would have a price tag of between $17,000 and $19,000.

Wolinski noted that the reasonable amount is only possible thanks to the generosity of the contractors he works , who have pledged the use of heavy equipment for use in the construction of the new field at no cost.

Wolinski even offered his own time as a volunteer to oversee the project and maintain the field from November to May for a year.

 He also noted that the state of the baseball and softball fields at Kent Center are, in his opinion, “atrocious.â€� This created a bit of concern with local resident Bruce Adams, who acknowledged his appreciation for the amount of generosity displayed by Wolinski, but felt that spending so much to repair just one field would leave the other fields in a state of decline.

Adams is a coach with the Berkshire United soccer group.

First Selectman Ruth Epstein thanked Wolinski for being so generous with his time and energy.

Kent Center School Principal Ron Viafore was at the meeting and  sounded optimistic about the project, which he said he will present to the Board of Education.

“We have done a lot of research and it sounds very promising,� he said.

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