Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Workers demolishing Sandy Hook Elementary School required to sign confidentiality agreements. Why?

Contractors demolishing Sandy Hook Elementary School are being required to sign confidentiality agreements forbidding public discussion of the site, photographs or disclosure of any information about the building where 26 people were (allegedly) fatally shot last December.

Selectman Will Rodgers said officials want to protect the Newtown school where the 20 children and six educators were killed, The News-Times reported.

"It's a very sensitive topic," he said Monday. "We want it to be handled in a respectful way." Project manager Consigli Construction has barricaded the property and intends to screen the perimeter to prevent onlookers from taking photographs. Full-time security guards will ensure the site is not disturbed.

Families of the victims and school staff visited the site, but public access is barred.

[You really think the goofy kid to the right killed 26 people? Did you ever see any photos of the inside of Sandy Hook Elementary? Yeh, me neither. Did you ever see any photos of blood-splattered floors and shots of the victims? Me neither. How about bodies being loaded into ambulances? No, not one. Gee, what was the deal with that?]

Anyway, the authorities are going to tear it down and it appears the community has been compensated. The security precautions at the school exceed those at other construction sites, town officials said.

Jim Juliano, a member of the Public Building and Site Commission, said he initially considered whether the heightened precautions might be excessive. But he believes extra vigilance is needed to shield Sandy Hook families and the community from exploitation.

Rodgers said the goal is to ensure the project is managed properly without interference from onlookers or the infliction of more pain on the community.

"Obviously, workers need access to the site, but inasmuch as we have put restrictions on our citizens, we don't really want those who are there somehow releasing information or recounting impressions of the site, given we are trying to move on, so to speak," Rodgers said.

Demolition is set to begin next week and be finished before the Dec. 14 anniversary of the shootings. A new school is expected to open by December 2016. Town voters last month accepted a state grant of $49.3 million to demolish the school and build a new one.

Can you say cover-up? No? How about conspiracy? No? Then, you can probably say 'gun control'.

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