Overcrowded Moncton schools top education council priorities - Action News
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New Brunswick

Overcrowded Moncton schools top education council priorities

The Anglophone East district education council approved the list of school projects it would like the provincial government to fund in the coming year on Tuesday.

The Anglophone East district education council is asking government to fund several school projects

The Anglophone East district education council approved thelist of school projects it would like the provincial government to fund in the coming year on Tuesday evening.

The list includes someupgrades and possible consolidation ofeast end schools,but chair Tamara Nichol says overcrowding at Northrop Frye and Evergreen Park schools remains thetop priority.

"We have exponential growth in the north end," Nichol said in an interview on Information Morning Monctonon Wednesday.

"We don't have enough room in those two schools to maintain the currentcatchmentarea so we need to do something and that's what this north end study is going to look at, because while there's growth in the north end there's not growth in some other areas of our city."

A review of school boundaries for nineschools in Monctonby Ernst& Youngis under way.

NorthropFrye,EvergreenPark,MagneticHill,Birchmount,Beaverbrook,QueenElizabeth,EdithCavell,Hillcrestand Bessborough schools will all be part of the boundarystudy.

"Once we get the results backfrom thatstudy at the end ofSeptember the district education council will make a determination at that time as to how we will move forward," Nichol said.

The second priority for the DEC is a mid-life upgrade for Bessborough School, a kindergarten to Grade 8 school in the west end of the city.

Nichol says the DEC is also asking for aboundary study ofschools in the east end of the city where consolidation is being considered.

She says students at Sunny Brae Middle, Forest Glen and Mountain View could be housed in a single new school.

"The truth is we don't really know what is the best thing to do in those areas," Nichol said.

"What we do know is those schools, as they are, need mid-life upgrades but before we go ahead and begin a big request for that we really need to know what is best to do in that area."

Anglophone East schools need $67M in repairs

Nichol says the list of capital projects neededat schools in Anglophone East continues to grow and the bill for repairs alonenow sits at approximately $67 million.

She says there is no way to know what the provincial government will decide to move forward with.

"So we do have a list that we go by but since we don't have the control or the money to do the projectsourselves, once the recommendations are made, at that point it's out of our hands it's up to government."

Nichol says there may be schools in other parts of New Brunswick that are in worse condition than schools in her district.

"It's not necessarily about each district getting a pot of money, it's now become about what schools need the most attention first."

Nichol says final decisions from the provincial government on funding areexpected to takeat least a couple of months.