ANDERSON, Ind. — Faculty, staff, parents and students in favor for retaining two high schools with grades 7-12 in Anderson Community Schools will gather for a forum next week before the school board decides on whether the city will have one or two high schools.
“A couple of (school board members) sound like they’re pretty entrenched and sound like they want to have just one high school,” said Doug Owens, a counselor at Highland High School. “I don’t think it’s a done deal, but from discussions and things I’ve heard, they’re trying to give that impression.”
Owens is spokesman for a group that favors two high schools. The group has scheduled a “parent/community open forum” in the Highland High School Auditorium at 6:30 p.m. Monday.
“You can’t go forward with a decision of this magnitude without hearing from the people and what’s in the best interest of the community,” he said.
The school board next meets on Tuesday, Dec. 8, at 6 p.m. in the administration offices at 29th and Meridian streets. Board members have signaled that a decision on consolidation could be made at that meeting.
The options for school closings were presented to the board in October as the school system grappled with projections of a multimillion-dollar budget deficit and persistently declining enrollment.
Neither the Anderson High School nor Highland High School building would close under options the school board is considering. Rather, the buildings would either become home to students in grades 7-12, or one school would become a middle school for grades 7-9, the other a high school with grades 10-12.
It’s unclear which building — Anderson or Highland — would continue as a high school if the school board opts for a single high school.
“It has nothing to do with either building. This is about a community and a school system that will be adversely affected,” Owens said.
He said those who support two high schools with grades 7-12 oppose a single high school in the city for reasons such as:
* Loss of extracurricular and athletic opportunities for students.
* Travel time and transportation costs.
* A possible exodus of students from the system.
Owens said an unscientific straw poll of Highland students found that 84 percent of them said they favored two schools, and a similar number said they would consider leaving ACS if the system had just one high school. He said 65 percent of students said they had already discussed with their parents plans to transfer from ACS if there was just one high school.
Those in favor of a single high school point to greater savings and raise concerns about students in grades 7-12 sharing the same school building.
Contact Dave Stafford: 648-4250, dave.stafford@heraldbulletin.com
The shape of schools to come
The Anderson Community School Corp. board is considering consolidation plans for the coming school year. Either of the options presented to the school board include closing Edgewood, Forest Hills, Killbuck and 29th Street elementaries.
* Option A: One high school, grades 10-12; one middle school, grades 7-9; seven elementary schools, with five K-3 schools and two 4-6 schools in the existing middle school buildings.
* Option B: Two high schools with grades 7-12. Five K-3 schools and two 4-6 in the existing middle school buildings.
Breaking News
Advocates of two high schools to have forum
- Breaking News
-
-
Bangor, Maine: The place where diverted flights go
Given the size of the place, the name "Bangor International Airport" might seem a little grandiose. But the airport actually gets an outsize share of international visitors.
-
Obama birth certificate OK by Arizona official
Arizona's secretary of state said Wednesday that Hawaii's official verification of President Barack Obama's birth records meets necessary requirements, meaning the president's name will appear on Arizona's ballot in the fall.
-
Obama, Dems redoubling money efforts to keep edge
His cash advantage threatened, President Barack Obama and his party are redoubling their fundraising efforts after robust hauls by Republican rival Mitt Romney and a slew of GOP-leaning super PACs that are raking in cash from the party faithful highly motivated to topple the Democrat.
-
Phillip Phillips is the new 'American Idol'
Bluesy guitar man Phillip Phillips of Leesburg, Ga., wins 11th "American Idol" crown.
-
States looking to new tolls to pay for highways
Driving onto an Interstate highway? Crossing a bridge on the way into work? Taking a tunnel under a river or bay? Get ready to pay.
-
$18.5M settlement for 'Transformers 3' injury
The family of a woman left with brain damage after an accident during the filming of "Transformers 3" has reached an $18.5 million settlement with Paramount Pictures.
-
Senate candidate visits Alexandria ethanol plant
In his first post-primary visit to Madison County on Wednesday, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Joe Donnelly visited the Poet Biorefining plant here to underscore his support for energy independence and Indiana corn farmers.
-
States looking to new tolls to pay for highways
Driving onto an Interstate highway? Crossing a bridge on the way into work? Taking a tunnel under a river or bay? Get ready to pay.
With Congress unwilling to contemplate an increase in the federal gas tax, motorists are likely to be paying ever more tolls as the government searches for ways to repair and expand the nation's congested highways.
-
US stocks open lower as European leaders meet
Markets are swooning in Europe and the U.S. as investors become increasingly skeptical that European leaders will succeed at jump-starting the region's economy and preventing a messy exit from the euro by Greece.
-
School bus crashes into central Indiana home
A school bus rumbled through the backyard of a suburban Indianapolis home and crashed into the side of the house.
- More Breaking News Headlines
-
Bangor, Maine: The place where diverted flights go




