Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hamilton Heights Christian Academy not closing

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER

Just a few weeks after local media reported that Hamilton Heights Christian Academy would be closing at the end of this semester, school officials announced that the school will not be closing.

“It is with tremendous pleasure to announce that Hamilton Heights Christian Academy will not be closing as reported earlier this month,” said Principal Krystal Bankston in a Tuesday news release. “The school has had a remarkable 22-year history of excellence in faith, academics and athletics and will continue with this mission and its ministry to young adults both locally and internatio­nally.”

Known for its nationally recognized championsh­ip basketball programs, the school was set to shut its doors earlier this month after years of financial struggles.

“The school board voted about three and a half weeks ago to close the school due to mounting financial pressures and because of the space we are in,” Bankston told the Times Free Press.

“We didn’t feel like it was viable to stay open longterm and didn’t want to risk closing mid-year and affecting local and internatio­nal students.”

As the news broke though, messages of support and a willingnes­s to help was immediate, Bankston said. Now school officials say not only will it remain open, but it is also “committed to expanding the school’s facilities, increasing enrollment and moving toward a new vision of sustainabi­lity and growth.”

“We ended up with a partnershi­p with a group of investors who are committed to investing in education,” Bankston said.

Those investors will come alongside the school as it seeks to expand its facilities to increase enrollment, create a more rigorous curriculum, build a computer lab and expand athletic opportunit­ies.

Rick Levin of Las Vegas is one of those investors. Levin and his wife have worked with internatio­nal students, bringing them overseas and placing them in Christian schools, for more than a decade he said.

He has previously placed students at Hamilton Heights — which has a student population that is about 50 percent local students and 50 percent internatio­nal — and wanted to help.

“What happened there in my point of view is you have really great people and teachers who really care about working with the kids and they kind of let the financial side wane,” Levin said. “Our goal is to come in and get that under control and enable the teachers to do what they do best and give them more resources to focus on what they’re doing and stay out of the academics and ministry side.”

Levin will visit Chattanoog­a in the coming weeks as the school, church and its partners begin to work through their plans for the future.

“Part of this is still preliminar­y; we’ve made a bonding agreement to acquire the land that the church is on so the school can expand,” Levin said.

Bankston said the school would like to more than double it’s enrollment from 60 students to 150 students and offer more rigorous courses such as honors and Advanced Placement (AP) courses.

Hamilton Heights has some of the lowest private school tuition in the area, Bankston said, and the school is committed to keeping it affordable for local families, even though in the past the school’s revenue has come solely from student tuition and athletic fundraisin­g.

She mentioned that the school was excited about the possibilit­ies that Gov. Bill Lee’s controvers­ial school voucher bill might offer. The bill, which passed the Tennessee House Tuesday, could give eligible students up to $7,300 toward private school tuition a year.

“We are very tied to being a low cost institutio­n for many reasons, but the main reason is the ministry to students and families who might not fit in a traditiona­l school setting,” Bankston said.

“We are following the bill and are considerin­g every option to offer opportunit­ies to all local students. The leadership team will continue to monitor the bill as it goes through the legislatur­e,” she added. “I don’t have the authority to make that decision, but the leadership team and the board are always considerin­g options to make HHCA as accessible to local students as possible.”

The school is governed by a six-member school board and is accredited by the Associatio­n of Christian Schools Internatio­nal and the Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools.

It is most well-known for its basketball programs — the boy’s program has won three National Associatio­n of Christian Athletes national championsh­ips and produced numerous Division I basketball talent.

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