Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Charter school plans new building in Bronzevill­e

- Rory Linnane

Dr. Howard Fuller Collegiate Academy filed plans Thursday to construct a new building on Vel Phillips and Garfield avenues, just south of North Avenue where there’s currently a parking lot and vacant storage buildings.

The charter school is seeking approval from the city’s Board of Zoning Appeals for the new building, which would serve about 500 students.

The location is in the Bronzevill­e area and about four miles southeast from the school’s current location, at Capitol Drive and 29th Street, where about 325 high school students were enrolled for this school year, according to state data.

Calls to the school about the project were not immediatel­y returned Friday.

The building would be at least four stories high, according to documents filed with the city, with part of the fourth level being an outdoor space.

The surroundin­g Bronzevill­e neighborho­od is in the midst of a series of commercial developmen­ts tied to the visual arts, including the Bronzevill­e Center for the Arts.

The site is across from Milwaukee Public Schools’ former Garfield Avenue Elementary School, which was targeted for renovation into apartments. The closest operating MPS school is Dr. George W. Carver Academy of Mathematic­s and Science, about five blocks away on W. Brown and N. 1st Streets.

Dr. Howard Fuller Collegiate Academy school was founded in 2004 by a group of pastors alongside Howard Fuller, a former MPS superinten­dent and longtime education activist, who now holds the title of Board Chair Emeritus.

Charter schools, which are given more flexibility than traditiona­l public schools, can be independen­tly run but must be approved by a public board. Most are approved by school boards but in Milwaukee, charter schools can also be approved by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee or, in the Collegiate Academy’s case, the city’s Charter School Review Committee.

The school focuses on enrolling its graduates in higher education. Last year, about 88% of Fuller graduates enrolled in a four-year college and about 12% in two-year programs, according to state data.

The earliest the Board of Zoning Appeals could consider the proposal is June 30, city officials said.

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