.
Feedback

Letter: Los Altos Needs a 10th School Site for Enrollment Growth

A 10th site will allow some balance of equity ... It is the most viable and will maintain what we hold most dear about our schools.

 

Editor: 

As a community of proud parents and active volunteers we have been facing a very difficult situation of balancing the facility needs of all 5000 LASD and BCS children across the district while keeping their needs as a whole in the forefront.

Our problem is not simple. It is a complex balance of prioritizing the education of all our children, the constraints of the education code, finite resources, and a growing student population.

Los Altos School District is a highly ranked district, one of the best in the state, and its student population is growing. There is growing demand and it is the district's obligation to meet that demand. A long-term solution must be found.  

Bullis Charter School is also a highly ranked charter school, one of the best in the state, and its population is growing. There is demand and it is within the power of the BCS board how to address that demand. Likewise, a long-term solution must be found, one such that we do not have to constantly revisit this topic and instead put all focus on the priority of educating our children.

District-wide growth is happening at a rate of 90 students per year (10 year average), if not more over shorter periods. Almost a quarter of that growth rate is occurring from around the San Antonio Visioning Area. With the recent apartment and condo construction, especially those marketed for young up and coming families, that growth will increase. Demographer estimates range as high as up to 100 to 200 new students once the units are filled. At the same time, the rest of the district will continue to experience an overall growth as a generation of early home owners cash in on their retirement (~20% of the single family residences are property valued at < $200k).  I and others have seen this yearly growth first hand, regardless of where we live within the district.

Recent proposals by the district board, BCS board, and well-meaning parents to close down a school and redistribute will not meet our long-term needs. Nor will increasing site density. These proposals are divisive and also threaten our successful school model of small neighborhood schools, throwing us quickly into large schools with nowhere to grow. Our schools are already close to capacity and the last time we had this many students in the district, we had 10 school sites. We can't ignore the fact that something must be done to accommodate all this growth. With our help, it's up to the two boards to solve next year's facility dilemma while being able to feed into a longer term solution.

It is my belief that a 10th site option is the most viable and will maintain what we hold most dear about our schools: small classes, community focal point, a place where our children are not lost into a crowd of anonymity, .... all things that contribute to making our schools among the best.   Scientific literature agrees on the importance of small schools:http://www.usd497.org/Consolidation/documents/Leithwood&Jantzi.pdf

Finding a new site within the boundary of LASD is no easy solution, especially one that can hold a school of 900 students, the size BCS wishes to have. Land is scarce and very costly.  Hillview, or other land owned by Los Altos, Los Altos Hills or Mt. View or any of the cities serving LASD would be ideal and the best solution for the students and the cities. 

We need the cities that are responsible for bringing in so many families to support our high-performing school district, especially if we want our schools to continue to improve and evolve.  

In, or if necessary, even out-of-district options, will permit BCS to flourish, unconstrained by the few options within our district boundary, and allow a choice of facility tailored to their own priorities and requirements.

There are a number of ways to reduce the cost to the district, for any 10th site option. For example, perhaps LASD and BCS can pool their resources by having the district purchase/lease the land and BCS contributing to future development. It is not unheard of for high-performing charter schools to partially, if not fully, self-fund facility costs, sometimes with commercial real estate (e.g. Livermore Valley Charter School, http://www.costar.com/News/Article/Charter-School-Buys-12-Acres-in-Livermore/142747). This is an opportunity for their school to build their facilities in a way they desire without considerable financial impact (in fact LVCS has not increased their annual requested donation level, http://www.lvcs.org/ccef/faq).

A 10th site will allow some balance of equity and much needed resources to return to our Egan and Blach Jr High students while giving the district more flexibility to tackle our long term growth.  Most importantly, a 10th site will improve our quality of education as we grow, strengthen our district, and our community. 

I ask of both LASD and Charter parents to keep all students in consideration, not just your local school and regardless of your preference for a solution.

Thank You,

Davida Ewan with a LASD student

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Los Altos Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Joan J. Strong May 22, 2013 at 11:21 am
Corrections: 1. Straw man attack: nobody is blaming BCS for district-wide growth. Nobody. 2. BCSRead More does not get "half the funding" of LASD. BCS gets about 6500 and LASD gets about 9500. The BCS program for typical children costs about twice as much as the comparable LASD program. BCS is simple an expensive hybrid public/private school, nothing more. 3. Mr. Roode pointed out that there are about 100 or so special ed. students at LASD (I cannot verify this but it seems very low). LASD calls out an annual expense of $7.5 million for special ed. meaning each of these students cost LASD $75,000, not $1,000 as he implied. 4. The law and the courts have ALREADY compelled LASD to give reasonably equivalent facilities and they have. BCS has a lower student/teacher ratio meaning that they have more classrooms for the same number of kids. This is not, legally speaking, LASD's problem. 5. Mr. Roode has yet to explain how the Covington campus could be 16 acres. Further, he continues to spread the fallacy that campuses ACREAGE is even remotely relevant to its student capacity. Campuses are limited by their location and traffic, not how many acres of grass there is in the back. 6. Were it not for BCS, we would have passed a bond in the last election, as the polling shows. BCS litigation has ripped our community apart and has left it with a mountain to climb when it comes to operating in a normal fashion.
L.A. Chung (Editor) May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
@David R. I think Homestead uses EarthCare Recycling, based on its April 6 E-Waste collection dayRead More publicity (http://bit.ly/10mIV14) : www.earthcarerecycling.com "Recycle FREE your old electronic equipment - working or not! Anything with a plug or PC board inside. Also accepted are non-household batteries, VHS tapes and other media, and scrap metal. Visit www.earthcarerecycling.com for a list of accepted items. "
David R. May 21, 2013 at 10:26 pm
What kind of bins are there? Do you take used CDROMs? How about VHS tapes? Cables and wire?
David R. May 20, 2013 at 01:18 pm
I saw a public report that said most of the discussion related to carpooling and so forth, sinceRead More Blach is separated so much from the rest of the school. You know, things like dropping off both kids at Egan, and then a group of kids headed for Blach share a ride or vice versa. I don't see how any nonparents can really help with that.
mtnview_parent April 12, 2013 at 03:06 am
The only problem with the charter school is that they cause more problem than they solve. TheyRead More want to close Covington, then Blach. So, they don't provide flexibility at all. They keep going to court. This is a case were the remedy is worst than the disease. The original idea is that we have to be creative with the 10th site. Land is scarce, and most likely, we cannot provide the same facility than other school within the district. People are not happy about being moved from their school (with good reason I feel) Solution: provide an inspiring project. May be an immersion program, or a more academic program, or maybe a program to help english learner from K-3. If we don't innovate with a more flexible program, we might just need to redraw the boundaries every 5-7 years. Nobody can foresee the future, but you can build flexibility.
Mitch Caldwell April 11, 2013 at 11:36 pm
Maybe offering a magnet school could help with stability? It can balance out enrollment at otherRead More schools so that attendance boundaries do not have to be redrawn. Isn't the charter school doing that for the LASD district right now?
mtnview_parent April 11, 2013 at 10:36 pm
I saw you had a good discussion on the definition of a neighborhood school. But beyond theRead More definitions, I would like to ask why does palo Alto school District and Cupertino School district have a mix of neighborhood school and some choice school. Those are two high performing district right next to us. Can a choice school be an excellent way to stop the highly disruptive attendance boundary change ? People say I am for statu quo, that I am against change. I feel that family and children need stability, that is why we don't change spouse at the pace the BoT change the attendance boundary. People who want some stability at home (and their school) do make a reasonable request.