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Alternative to school closings

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Author: 
Toronto Star
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Article
Publication Date: 
9 May 2010
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EXCERPTS

With enrolment declining by the thousands every year, the Toronto
public school board's plan to start closing some of its half-empty
schools makes good sense. But closing is not the only option for every
underutilized building.

There are opportunities to fill some of these schools by adding
programs that would serve the needs of the whole neighbourhood: child
care, evening and weekend recreation, activities for seniors, public
health clinics, and settlement services for new Canadians.

But turning schools into vibrant community hubs, particularly at a
time of budget constraints, requires school trustees and city
councillors, as well as their officials, to work together in imaginative
ways.

Unfortunately, trustees and councillors seem to prefer fighting
over who should pay to keep school pools open, for example, or, just
recently, over after-hours parking on school lots.

Given the difficulty trustees and councillors have been working
through bureaucratic silos on pools and parking, it does not bode well
for their ability to cooperate on broader issues.

In a report last week, Chris Spence, the board's director of
education, indicated that he wants to address all the needs of students,
not just those that occur during the school day, and the realities of
their neighbourhoods. He is promoting "full-service" schools as part of
his overall plan to improve student achievement, tackle social problems
and put the board on a sustainable financial footing.

"Investments in superior curriculum and the most technologically
advanced classrooms will only be squandered unless more pressing needs
of children and their parents have already been addressed," Spence
argued on the Star's Opinion page last week.

Later this month, trustees will be asked to approve plans to
create 16 full-service schools, which could be open all year long and
provide a range of services for students and the surrounding community.
...

-reprinted from the Toronto Star

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