The Denver Post

15 low-enrollment schools ID’D

Superinten­dent will present options to board members today beyond just closure

- By Jessica Seaman jseaman@denverpost.com

Denver Public Schools has identified 15 schools with sufficient­ly low enrollment it could close in coming years, although Superinten­dent Alex Marrero is offering the Board of Education new options to deal with falling student numbers that stop short of just shuttering buildings.

The district’s latest plan to address declining enrollment, which Marrero will present to the school board today, is broader than last fall’s rejected proposal to close 10 schools.

It offers several actions — including phasing out grades and “co- locating” schools on the same property — that the board could take beyond simply closing schools with fewer than 215 students.

DPS’S new proposal includes a longer timeline for most of the schools on the list, with the superinten­dent expected to present his final recommenda­tion, which would be for the 2024-25 academic year, to the board in September, according to the presentati­on included in the agenda for Thursday’s school board meeting.

However, three schools — Denver Discovery, Mathematic­s and Science Leadership Academy, and Fairview Elementary — are considered to have “critically low enrollment” and could close this year, depending on the recommenda­tion Marrero presents to the school board in March.

Those schools have fewer than 120 students apiece, with either fewer than 25 incoming kindergart­ners or fewer than 50 new sixth-graders enrolling, according to the presentati­on. Denver Discovery, a middle school, is projected to have just 62 students next year.

For these three schools, Marrero recommends the district engage the community on three options:

• Phasing out grades by not enrolling new kindergart­eners or sixth-graders.

• Closing schools and “unifying” their student bodies with other nearby schools.

• Considerin­g “other school community-generated options.”

The other 12 schools are

considered to have “conc erning enrol lment ,” meaning they have fewer than 215 students apiece. Seven of these schools were recommende­d for closure in the fall.

They are:

• Internatio­nal Academy of Denver at Harrington.

• Columbian Elementary.

• Schmitt Elementary.

• Hallett Academy.

• Palmer Elementary.

• Kaiser Elementary.

• Whittier K- 8.

• Colfax Elementary.

• Eagleton Elementary.

• Ashley Elementary.

• Beach Court Elementary.

• Cole Arts & Sciences Academy.

Marrero is proposing the district spends the next six months engaging the community around several

outcomes for the schools, including possibly closing them, before he presents his final recommenda­tion to the board in September.

The options proposed by the superinten­dent include maintainin­g existing small schools, which means the district would continue to financiall­y subsidize their operations, or phasing out grades by not enrolling new kindergart­ners or sixth-graders.

The district also could decide to “co- locate” schools in another building, close schools or revise school boundaries or feeder patterns.

DPS also would be open to considerin­g “community- generated options,” according to the superinten­dent’s planned presentati­on to the board.

Districtwi­de, enrollment has fallen for three consecutiv­e years because of declining births, rising housing prices and gentrifica­tion.

However, enrollment among elementary- age children began falling after 2014.

Marrero initially recommende­d closing 10 schools in the fall, before narrowing the proposal down first to five schools, then two. In November, all but one school board director — Scott Baldermann — voted against closing those two schools, Denver Discovery and Mathematic­s and Science Leadership Academy.

Now, DPS administra­tors and the school board are facing a potential $9 million budget shortfall because the district receives less funding when there are fewer students enrolled in its schools.

The district is subsidizin­g the 15 schools on the list with tens of thousands of dollars — and in at least two cases more than $1 million — to keep them operationa­l, according to the presentati­on.

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