This seems like a great cause and if I still had all my tanks set up would have a bunch of frags to donate to them.
I do however have a big problem with this project. I had no income with 4 fully stocked tanks. I had to budget reef and everyone here had seen my 55 done on a budget.
First of all, I do not think that this teacher is educated in the reef hobby very well. Seems to be a newbie with little knowledge. Second of all why do you need 6 ecotech radions. There is no way you need 6 led's over a 120 or 180 or whatever size tank that you have. That is over kill!!! Also, it say that they have a MH that is in bad condition so you need 6 of the most expensive leds on the market. You should be happy with just a t5 or another MH fixture that works. You could even do the evergrow, reefbreeders, ocean rivive led's that work just as well as a radion and they are only $160-$180 a piece instead of $550-$650 for one radion. And you should only need 4 led's at the most and could get by with 3 led's. Also why do you need a chiller. This questions your skills and knowledge of the reef hobby. A reef tank can range from 76-85 degrees throughout the year. I think that they see 80F and freak out, like a lot of uninformed people do. Also back to the lights, a MH bulb can go longer than 1 year, just ask henry. I believe that he had on his nice 320 MH bulbs that were 4 years old. And another thing if you can't afford salt why do you do 3-4 10 gallon water changes a week. Cut that out. You can change the water way less than that. Unless the tank is skimmer less which I highly doubt. It looks to me that there are some nice corals in the tank. why don't the students frag them out to sell or trade for other corals. Hmmmm...... I am not trying to tare this apart as it is a great learning for the kids. But, there is plenty of stuff that can be done to cut cost and still have a really nice tank. Seems to me he just wants free handouts without trying. I would be more than willing to sit down with the guy and discuss a better way to go about this. So, he and his students can enjoy a beautiful reef tank for years to come.