Big Changes
Ahead…
For the past couple of months, the Onteora School District
has been holding a series of public meetings at which a group
of hired architectural and planning consultants have been
discussing the sprawling district’s demographics, the
state of its current facilities, its mandated needs, and the
various directions it could take from here vis a vis its future.
The events have been well-publicized, via the local media
and announcements sent home with students, and have been held
in all of the five school facilities that service the district.
The idea behind the whole exercise has been to get the community
(or communities, given the breadth of Onteora, spread across
three townships, and including parts of several others) involved
in deciding its future. Because change is necessary.
Change is necessary because the buildings that house our educational
facilities, where our local kids will set out on their future
paths, and our region’s ability to both maintain cohesion
and attract new residents, are aging fast. Change is necessary
because the individual communities that make up Onteora are
shifting, with some losing their family-raising profiles while
others become more family-oriented. Change is necessary because
new educational standards, across the nation and state, call
for new norms that allow students to shift from elementary
to junior and senior high school via a cogent, three to four
year middle school experience. Change is necessary because
change is inevitable, especially when it comes down to the
education our young people need to keep up with a world that
will change beyond what we experienced at their age, and more.
Unfortunately, preparing for change — predicting it
and making the shifts in how we’ve done things to accommodate
how we feel we should be doing them – is not easy. It
can cost money into the future being planned for, via bonds
and other means of borrowing. Most importantly, it can cost
us the comforts tied to doing things the ways in which we’ve
always done things. It can be disruptive, and require more
from us, as social beings with a need to think of the communal
good, than we’ve become used to giving.
Several things have come up out of the recent Future of the
District meetings that have taken up the last couple of months
at Onteora.
First off, our overall student body is shrinking in size.
That shrinkage is occurring much more quickly in some places
– Woodstock, in particular — than others. We need
to look anew at a situation that now has one elementary school
closed, three open, to see if that is the best use for our
facilities… do demographic trends and a shift to a four-grade
middle school suggest shifting down to two elementary schools?
What with rising transportation costs, would it make sense
to situate those based on a district-wide sense of need, or
via current community wishes?
Secondly, the Middle School model — which we could only
eschew completely knowing that it would then set our students
apart from a shared national and state experience —
suggests that mid-grade students learn best when in their
own school, yet with access to the sports and classroom facilities
of junior and senior high schoolers. This may prove the most
expensive element in the current planning process.
Thirdly, and most difficultly, is the coherence of a school
district. Onteora has long suffered from a split personality.
This has been exacerbated in recent years by the difficult
tax issues raised by the Large Parcel issue, by the nostalgic
loyalties brought to the forefront during the mascot debacle;
by the disparity of the townships brought together under the
Onteora roof. To dissolve this union and start off again,
we found in recent years, is close to impossible. But if looking
at hard choices involving future changes, perhaps it makes
sense to look at all school matters, including who’s
included, and not, and the geographic problems that may have
arisen in the years since borderlines were first drawn.
The process is still in its early stages and we don’t
feel it’s time yet to start making hard suggestions
other than to point out what’s at stake. And urge deeper
involvement from all our community stakeholders.
We may not like the fact that we have to share these decisions
with other towns, people with different needs and wants than
us. But we do. And hence, we must at least try and consider
all aspects of the choices before us before spouting off opinions,
or using our fears to hamstring our kids.
Current talk includes the possibility of Woodstock losing
its school because West Hurley, close by, has a larger campus…
and the Woodstock facility could get a better asking price,
if it needed to be sold to help defray other costs of change.
How about a Middle School in Woodstock? Seems a bit close
to the Village Green for many parents, and the infrastructure
isn’t quite there in terms of sports facilities and
the like. If whittled down to two schools, could Olive allow
Bennett to become a Middle School, sharing facilities with
the junior/senior high school campus it shares parking lots
with? Or would half the Onteora community force Phoenicia
to close, and those students in the western end of the district
to ride an hour or more each way to elementary school?
It’s a shame more people didn’t come out to the
recent informational meetings on these subjects. These are
very difficult questions ahead of. They’ll need informed
decisions by we who will vote on these matters, in bonding
resolutions, in budget appropriations, in the shape of the
boards who will see Onteora face its future.
One thing is for certain. To simply react to such matters
fiscally, from the perspective of our current pocketbooks
and wallets, would be an even greater shame for our kids,
and the future of our towns. Our larger community. Our promise.
Happy Holidays and a strong New Year… may we all meet
what’s facing us all with strength, fortitude, and clarity.
PS