Windsor

School trustees grapple with 6,500 empty spaces

The Windsor-Essex County Public School Board has 6,516 empty spaces throughout the region, according to a report from district staff. That number is expected to spike to more than 7,000 by 2026.

On average, schools in the Windsor region are 47 years old and among oldest inventory in Ontario

The Windsor-Essex County Public School Board has more than 6,500 empty spaces at its 68 schools throughout the region. (iStock)

Windsor's public school trustees are looking to reduce thousands of empty spaces that are costing the district millions of dollars in potential funding.

The Windsor-Essex County Public School Board has 6,516 empty spaces throughout the region, according to a report from district staff. That number is expected to spike to more than 7,000 by 2026.

The 148-page document, called the Long Term Accommodation Plan, shows about half the district's schools are well under capacity.

Trustee Jessica Sartori found the numbers staggering. 

"When a school board has empty student spaces, it means those student spaces are actually costing us money," she told Windsor Morning host Tony Doucette. "I found it to be a little bit shocking."

As of September, the public board's total enrolment was 35,331 students and enrolment is expected to continue to decline over the next decade.

Ward 3 Councillor Rino Bortolin. (Rima Hamadi/CBC)

Earlier this year, schools like Hugh Beaton and Queen Victoria were targeted for closure because of already low enrolment. The school board says a school like Queen Victoria can accommodate about 650 students. But in 10 years, the report projects the school will have about half that many students. Ward 3 Councillor Rino Bortolin advocated to keep schools like Queen Victoria open due to a lack of speciality programs at existing neighbourhood schools.

"Keeping a school open should not have an impact on teaching and instruction levels. The problem is when moving ahead and what we've seen with the Giles Campus is that they created a french immersion school without doing an impact study to see what impact it would have on the area schools," Bortolin said.

"If we knew, four or five years ago, that Prince Edward and Queen Victoria would be on the chopping block for closures, would we still have created a separate stand-alone french immersion school right in the same neighbourhood?"

Windsor-Essex public schools are, on average, 47-years-old and among the oldest inventory of schools in Ontario, according to the report.

With the province funding school boards at a rate of $11,000 per student, the Windsor-Essex board is missing out on potentially $71 million with its 6,500 empty spaces. 

"The big question is how do we reduce the number of empty student spaces? There are a variety of ways to do that. One way to do that is by closing a school, which to me is a last resort. Another way to do that is to fill them with potential community partners," Sartori said.