Hundreds make plea of 'Save our schools!' to Granite
Holladay Council may ask the board to keep neighborhood schools
More than 200 students and parents rally outside the Granite District headquarters on Wednesday.
Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Hundreds of students and parents rallied outside Granite School District headquarters Wednesday, waving signs and chanting "Save our schools!" in hopes the Board of Education would hear their plea.
Meanwhile, in a rare move, the Holladay City Council today is expected to OK a letter to the board in support of keeping neighborhood schools.
The rally, which attracted perhaps 200 to 300 people and coincided with the final open house for public input on the matter, was largely organized by students, several community representatives said.
Students from schools including Canyon Rim and Morningside elementaries and Wasatch Junior High, under threat of closing under options before the board, attended the rally. Student leaders from Olympus and Skyline high schools also supported alternatives to school closures.
"We don't want megaschools," said Skyline student president Cameron Hansen, speaking in favor of a community proposal that would adjust boundaries but not close schools to balance enrollments. "If they close our feeder schools, the whole (network) will close."
The Granite board is scheduled to consider public input Nov. 8 and vote Nov. 29.
District officials praised the students for exercising their civic responsibilities and expressing concern for their schools by attending the rally.
"Every bit of input we receive . . . I think has an impact," Superintendent Steve Ronnenkamp said. "This thing is so far from coming to any conclusion."
Board President Patricia Sandstrom made no promises.
"I don't know if it will make a difference," she said of the rally. "I think we'll take it into consideration with everything else."
Last spring, a district utilization study reported Granite schools have 8,700 empty seats, or enough to fill two elementaries, two junior highs and two high schools and costs $3 million a year to maintain, the district reports.
Last month, the board voted to take public input on three options intended to improve efficiency and educational equity in the 69,000-student district. All three options include closing schools.
Some parents in Cottonwood and Granger high communities have agreed a few schools need to close. Others are pressing the school board to save their neighborhood school.
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