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INSIDE
No progress
on school cuts
By Meg Olson & Tara Nelson
“Haven’t
we been grilled enough about this already?” Blaine
school superintendent Mary Lynne Derrington was dismissive and
school board members rolled their eyes when asked by a reporter
from The Northern Light if the board was going to further consider
the ramifications of eliminating a teacher and the third grade
from Point Roberts primary school.
As kindergarten
enrollment in the local school risked falling to one student
from an anticipated six, and total school enrollment dipped
to 10, Derrington was asked by the All Point Bulletin in a
telephone interview for her opinion on how low enrollment would
need to go before it was no longer a viable school. “I
don’t have one on that,” she said. “I don’t
feel comfortable saying.”
Nancy Bakarich,
principal of both the Blaine and Point Roberts primary schools,
said four of the students previously enrolled in the Point
Roberts had opted to attend the Blaine campus. Parents of one
of the two remaining kindergarten students said they would
look at options in Canada and had started discussions with
the Delta school district as well as visiting several of the
private schools in the Ladner/Tsawwassen area.
Asked why
parents were voting with their feet and pulling their children
from the Point Roberts school, she said the board had not discussed
it and had no plans to discuss it. “Part
of it is people’s choice and right now people are
angry,” she
said.
The anxiety
of local parents made front page news in the Seattle Times
June 13, where the question was again asked how low can enrollment
go before the “downward
spiral” points
to the closure of the school.
School district board member Barrie Hull wouldn’t discuss
the possibility that the district needed a strategy to
continue the survival of the school. “We’ve already
said we aren’t closing the school! What do you want?” he
said, adding any inquiries be directed to the school
board in writing.
Members
of the Point Roberts parent teacher organization have asked
to meet with Derrington in hopes of getting the district to
work with them. “Our group intends to keep
focusing on the needs of the campus and its relationship to
the entire community and hopefully succeed in re-instating
services and grade levels in the future,” said association
president Linda Hughes. “We have not thrown in the towel
quite yet.” She
said a July meeting was now planned.
At the June
20 school board meeting Derrington was guardedly open
to the possibility recently cut services could be
added back if the school got more use. “It’s
a possibility, but there needs to be enough people,” she
said. “We’ll
have to see.” Derrington had previously said
that decisions about staffing in all schools were a
function of enrollment.
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