CRAWFORDVILLE, Fla. (WCTV) -Tuesday night in Wakulla county, the school board addressed overcrowding issues at Crawfordville Elementary School.
They hosted a town hall meeting to talk about solutions and allow parents and community members to share their opinions.
The school board says current student enrollment at the elementary school is 709. The building’s capacity is 699. To address the issue the district has come up with four possible options.
Those are, revoking out-of-zone requests, changing school zone boundaries, building a new school or adding classrooms.
Some parents say these changes could have a big impact on their families.
Kyle Gibbs, a Crawfordville community member, who has children at the elementary school attended Tuesday night’s meeting.
“I’ve got a kid in fourth grade, and a kid that just started there, and this rezoning is going to affect us. it’s going to move them back to 7 miles away,” Gibbs said.
The Wakulla county schools superintendent, Richard Myhre says he heard those concerns and took time Tuesday night to answer questions.
He said the district is looking at the big picture.
“Responsible growth is a good thing, and you certainly would rather have the challenge of growth than have students leaving your school district and having to close schools, and so those concerns are valid. the reality is we may be blessed with a fifth elementary school,” said Myhre.
The superintendent says this is all part of planning ahead and nothing would take effect until next school year.
He says the next step is making a recommendation to the school board next month.
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