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Where's My High School?

by Catherine Foss, published on October 13, 2008 at 7:44PM

 

Don't Take Your High School for Granted

If having an adequately equipped high school in the nearby vicinity is something that's always been available to you and your children, perhaps you should consider yourself lucky -- for students in the downtown Sacramento area, the push for a comprehensive high school continues. Community members from downtown and extending through East Sacramento, McKinley Park, Tahoe Park, College Greens, Oak Park and River Park are not taking no for an answer: their children need a school nearby, with all the music, sports, arts and other goodies that every high school student is entitled to.  

 

A Multi-Layered Problem

The story behind the debate goes as follows: Sacramento High School, located nearest to the Oak Park neighborhood, existed as a public high school for over 150 years. In 2003, it was closed by the SCUSD Board of Education. The Board hoped to improve the school's low performance by re-opening it as a charter school associated with St. Hope Public Schools. Following this action, a lawsuit was opened by parents and teachers. The court ruled that the creation of the charter school was not in compliance with the law, and a court-ordered settlement required that the SCUSD create a new public high school by September 2008, which would encompass at least 500 students. The school would be called the Consent Decree High School.  

 

The Board's solution to this? Community leaders and the SCUSD board recently proposed the opening of a new high school at Marian Anderson Elementary School, a 6 acre site that currently holds a preschool and an elementary school for emotionally handicapped students. Many parents and community members feel that this location and proposal is inadequate. While the former Sacramento High School could accommodate up to 2800 students and had amenities such as a gymnasium, theater, swimming pool and sports facilities, the new high school would only be able to encompass 500 students, with very few extracurricular activities -- students would have to go to Hiram Johnson for sports. 

 

Many Parents Want a Different Solution

At this point, no comprehensive public high school has been created, or even proposed, to serve the neighborhoods of Midtown, Oak Park, East Sac, River Park, College Greens and Tahoe Park. The former Sacramento High School site now houses St. Hope's charter high school, with about 1100 students enrolled -- even though the site has space for 2800 students. Less than half of these students are former Sacramento High students. With the cry of "Where's my high school?", students, parents and teachers are insisting that a new public high school, with the same enrollment capacity and  variety of amenities, be opened to replace Sacramento High School. In addition, parents are upset that although all the former amenities still exist at St. Hope, students from neighboring public schools aren't allowed to use them -- even though this school and all the amenities were paid for by taxpayer money, by families living in the surrounding areas. Even if the students were allowed to use these amenities, what parent has the time to cart his or her children around from one school to the next? 

 

Is the Current Solution Working?How has the closing of Sacramento High School affected your children? What other options has your family explored in response? If your child has attended or does attend St. Hope, what was his or her experience like?  Should the students be allowed to use the amenities at St. Hope, or is there a better option? What should parents do in the meantime, before a new high school is created? What do you think is a good compromise to this situation, if there is one?   

 

Get Involved! Interested in signing the petition for a new comprehensive public high school?

 

Sign the petition here: www.ipetitions.com/petition/newhighschool/ To find out more about this issue,

 

visit the "New SCUSD High School" issue online: http://newhighschool.wordpress.com/

 

To learn more about the current Sacramento High School, which is part of the St. Hope charters, visit their site here: http://www.sachigh.org/ 

 

 

Go to the Sacramento Press

 

 

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What Adds More Value To Your Home? 

1) Installing double pane windows and granite countertops or
2) Supporting a good public high school in your neighborhood

 

Whether or not you have school-aged children in your household, the lack of a functional public high school serving our community is dramatically affecting the value of your home. Buyers choose neighborhoods with good public schools. Right now there is NO public neighborhood high school in East Sac, Midtown, River Park or downtown. The School District only offers enrollment at distant facilities and underperforming schools.

 

What’s Missing is Advocacy

We have outstanding elementary and middle schools in this community.

We have existing facilities that could easily accommodate a neighborhood high school.

We have a tax base that is already footing the bill.

 

What you can do:

1)    Sign our on-line petition.

2)    Write to the School Board.

3)    Attend School Board meetings when critical items are heard.

4)    Contribute to WMHS to pay for outreach and advocacy.

5)    Tell your friends and neighbors.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WhereIsMyHighSchool

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/newhighschool/

 

Our Neighborhood Coalition is supported by McKinley Elvas Neighborhood Association, East Sac Improvement Association, River Park Neighborhood Association and College Greens Neighborhood Association, Sacramento County Taxpayers League

Click Here to Go to the Where Is My High School Web Site

 

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