Orange County Public Schools, set to close seven schools by the end of the academic year, says it could move alternative schools, administrative departments and outside community partners, including a pediatrician’s office, into the shuttered campuses.
Union Park Middle School and Bonneville, Chickasaw, Eccleston, Meadow Woods, McCoy and Orlo Vista elementary schools are all slated to close their doors by August because of declining enrollment. OCPS lost almost 5,600 students this year.
In an email sent to OCPS staff late Tuesday, the district presented potential options for most of the schools, changes that would happen in the 2027-28 school year.
“No decision has been made, however, we want to provide as much transparency as possible,” the district’s email read.
Two existing alternative schools, Acceleration East and Positive Pathways, could move into the campuses of Chickasaw and Orlo Vista, respectively, the email said. That would give the alternative schools an “upgraded facility,” it said.
A “pediatric health facility” run by Orange Blossom Health could operate at Eccleston Elementary, according to the plans. Orange Blossom Health also runs healthcare services at OCPS Academic Center for Excellence, a K-8 school in Orlando’s Parramore neighborhood.
Meadow Woods Elementary could become “Community Partner Spaces,” but the email did not provide any information on who those partners might be. The school could also be used as space for professional development trainings, it said.
Other OCPS departments could move into empty school campuses too. Under the draft timeline, McCoy Elementary would become the new home for the district’s Global Welcome Center and Student Enrollment offices. OCPS’ Facilities Services department would move into Union Park Middle, and the School Choice and HR Compliance departments would move into Acceleration East’s old campus.
Departments would move to the empty campuses if those buildings more appropriately fit their needs, said Michael Ollendorff, a district spokesman.
The school board would need to approve the changes at an upcoming meeting. It must also later approve plans to change attendance zones for students currently attending the soon-to-closed schools.
The school closures will impact about 3,200 students and 270 teachers.
In December, the board directed Superintendent Maria Vazquez to begin the process of closing the seven schools because of the enrollment drop. The seven schools were picked because of their low enrollment, projections that show they’ll lose more students in the next 10 years, and their proximity to other schools that have room for more students.
Each of the seven schools currently enrolls only about half the students it has room for, as of the Dec. 15 enrollment counts. Union Park Middle, the emptiest of the seven, enrolls about 560 students on a campus meant for more than 1,400.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.