PROVO — The back-to-school blues included some red faces Monday for thousands of Provo students when their summer vacation ended Monday and the dog days of August followed them into classrooms without air conditioning.

Schoolchildren at four elementary schools escaped the brunt of an 88-degree day because the first day of school ended early, as scheduled, before the heat of the day.

Students at Centennial Middle School had a full day of school in a building that, in higher temperatures last week, grew hot enough that multiple sources said more than one teacher went home early from preparation time because they didn't feel well.

A vice principal at Centennial could not confirm those reports, Provo School District student services director Greg Hudnall said.

"We've had our problems," Hudnall said. "I imagine it was pretty hot for them."

Temperatures are expected to climb above 90 today and remain there through the rest of the week.

"It has been extremely hot and we've had to get all kinds of fans," said a member of the Rock Canyon Elementary faculty who requested anonymity because the employee wasn't authorized to talk about the problem. "The temperature is cooler outside today, so it's not as bad as last week. They told us it would be fixed by today, but we've heard that story all summer."

Provo School District officials have been scrambling to fix air conditioning systems, Hudnall said, but with problems affecting several schools, they have found it difficult to find enough manpower to address all of the problems at during a summer that included massive projects like the start of construction of a new elementary school, demolition of an old elementary school and major improvements at a number other schools.

"The problem is just getting enough people to respond," Hudnall said.

After some sweaty back-to-school nights last week, workers successfully got the a/c running in time for the first day at Provo High School, Farrer Elementary and Westridge Elementary.

"We've got air," Westridge principal Gaye Gibbs said at midday Monday. "We've had it about two hours."

Relief could come soon for the four elementary schools still experiencing trouble — Rock Canyon, Canyon Crest, Wasatch and Timpanogos.

Rock Canyon should have cool air today, Hudnall said. Workers are close to fixing problems at Canyon Crest, Wasatch and Timpanogos. The district tore down the Timpanogos building this summer, so the children and teachers are meeting at the old Oakridge School this year as construction begins on a new building.

Each of the elementary schools are scheduled to let out early all week to allow for afternoon and evening parent-teacher conferences.

Centennial Middle School should have air conditioning by Friday, Hudnall said. The school has benefited from $4 million in recent improvements, but the air conditioning was not adequate and the Provo Board of Education authorized spending an additional $400,000 for an upgrade.

The reason for the outages have been varied. A flood in the basement this summer damaged equipment at Westridge. A roof leak caused problems at Farrer. Other schools had parts wear out or break down. Several schools had cool air in portions of their buildings but not in others.

School starts today in the Alpine and Nebo school districts, where spokeswomen said air conditioning systems appeared ready.

Nebo buildings generally use swamp coolers, and some teachers have complained it is too warm or too cold, spokeswoman Lana Hiskey said.

No complaints have been heard by the Alpine School District, spokeswoman Jerri Mortensen said.

Provo's Hudnall said some might question why the district tried to undertake so many projects this summer, a year after Provo residents voted for a $35 million school bond.

"Every builder, every contractor said that every month we wait, the price on our projects goes up a percentage," he said. "We bonded this year and we need to make sure we get the most out of it. Why did we do this all at once? We felt forced to."

First day of school across Northern Utah

Alpine — Today

Nebo — Today

Tooele — Wednesday

Granite — Aug. 27

Jordan — Aug. 27

Salt Lake — Aug. 28

Davis — Aug. 29

Already back in school:

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Ogden — Monday

Provo — Monday

Washington — Aug. 15

E-mail: twalch@desnews.com

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