School district looks to resolve transfer problems
Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- After several years of problems with transfers
into Sowers Middle School, the Huntington Beach City School District
continues to look at adopting a policy to put the issue to rest.
At Tuesday’s meeting, district staff presented the Board of Trustees
with a report on open enrollment at Sowers, which for years has upset
parents. Residents, mostly from the Landmark tract between Adams and
Yorktown avenues and Newland and Magnolia streets, apply for transfers to
Sowers each year. These parents didn’t want to separate their children
from friends who will attend Sowers next year. Some also had concerns
about children having to cross Beach Boulevard to get to Dwyer Middle
School.
“It puts an added anxiety on parents,” said John Conniff, the
district’s director of administrative services.
So far, district officials said they have been able to accommodate
students each year the problem has arisen. But officials want to adopt a
formal policy to remedy the issue.
The board showed interest in the staff’s recommendation to continue
the current open enrollment process with one change. Starting with the
2001-2002 school year, students who have intradistrict transfers to
attend elementary schools that feed into Sowers should be allowed to
continue onto Sowers without having to go through the open enrollment
process again.
This change would impact only 13 children who are on open enrollment
transfers within the district at the present time.
“That’s the best permanent solution,” Trustee Robert Mann said.
Staff members looked at options that included changing the boundaries
of specific geographic areas, giving students in specific areas the
option of enrolling into either Dwyer or Sowers and allowing students who
have already been accepted into one of Sowers’ feeder elementary schools
through open enrollment the ability to automatically continue onto Sowers
without having to go through the open enrollment process again.
“We’ve had several values come into conflict,” Conniff said about the
open enrollment policy at Sowers.
While district officials support the choice of attendance among its
district schools, they also want to make sure each site is efficiently
used without any imbalances of enrollment that could result in
overcrowding.
The district will still limit the number of students who enroll at
Sowers to the capacity of the school, but may start doing so at the
elementary schools before it becomes a problem at the middle school
level.
Enrollment numbers indicate that the middle schools should have their
highest enrollment over the next three years. It is likely that both
middle schools will have enrollment that strains their current student
capacity. However, those figures should decrease below the present
enrollment after those three years.
Enrollment projections for next year at Sowers show that there will be
room to accept this year’s open enrollment transfer requests. Last year,
the district had a waiting list of 36 and was able to accept all those
students at Sowers. Parents will apply at the end of the month for
transfers.
The matter will brought to the board at the next meeting on March 20,
but will not be brought for action for at least another month.
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