Boston School Committee votes to close three schools, reconfigure three others

Boston School Committee votes to close three schools, reconfigure three others




Local News

The decision follows weeks of protests by families and educators who say the plan will fracture school communities.

Boston Superintendent Mary Skipper. Craig F. Walker / The Boston Globe, File

On Wednesday evening, the Boston School Committee approved the closures of three schools and the reconfiguration of three more, amid widespread opposition.

The district will close the pre-K to third grade Lee Academy Pilot School in Dorchester and two high schools: Another Course to College in Hyde Park and the Community Academy of Science and Health in Dorchester. The closures go into effect during the 2027-2028 school year. 

The plan also cuts high school grades from the Henderson K-12 Inclusion School and seventh and eighth grades from the Tobin K-8 School. 

However, starting next fall, Russell Elementary School will add a sixth grade. The school currently serves pre-K through fifth grade.

“Closing and merging schools is some of the most difficult work we do,” Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper said before the vote. “No superintendent, no School Committee member wants to lead through closures.”

Skipper acknowledged that closing a school is an “emotional and often painful experience,” even when recommendations grounded in what is best for the students and district are at the heart of the decision. 

However, Skipper said, after decades of avoiding or postponing decisions, schools now have far more seats than students, leaving many classrooms and buildings underutilized.

“I know how difficult school closures and mergers are,” she said, noting she was a part of multiple ones during her time at Tech Boston Academy. “These are not recommendations we make lightly, knowing it impacts students, families, staff, communities, who are deeply connected to their schools.”

The committee voted 6-1 in favor of the closures and school reconfigurations. 

Backlash from the announcement

The closure announcements made by administrators a little over a month ago initiated protests from students, families, and the Boston Teachers Union.

In a bulletin ahead of the meeting, the Boston Teachers Union argued that “the district cannot continue to close school buildings and disrupt close-knit communities without offering those students and educators a merger to keep their school community together.”

Students at the affected schools will have priority through the BPS assignment process to transfer to other schools. 

The closures are part of the district’s plan to close nearly 20 schools by 2030. The plan comes as the district has experienced a decline in student enrollment, citing 1,700 fewer students in October this year than last, as it saw an increase in dual-language students and students with disabilities. 

Previously, Delavern Stanislaus, the district’s chief of capital planning, said the small high schools are operating without gyms, at low capacity rates, and with a high churn rate, meaning the student population is constantly changing.

“An underutilized school is an under-resourced school,” she said.

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Beth Treffeisen is a general assignment reporter for Boston.com, focusing on local news, crime, and business in the New England region.



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