Calgary Catholic School District again eyeing St. Angela and St. Gerard schools for closure - Action News
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Calgary Catholic School District again eyeing St. Angela and St. Gerard schools for closure

Two Calgary Catholic Schools with continuously low enrolment are again being considered for closure.

Each school has fewer than 150 students, including online learners

St. Angela School in northeast Calgary is facing the prospect of closure, as is St. Gerard in southwest Calgary. (Google)

Two Calgary Catholic schools with continuously low enrolment are again being considered for closure.

St. Angela and St. Gerardschools were previously considered for closure in 2020, but that process was halted in March because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Wednesday Calgary Catholic School District (CCSD) trustees voted in favour of starting the process again because of continued low enrolment.

This year, with online learning included, St. Gerard has 83 studentsenrolled while St. Angela has 109.

"We like to think a school that is a healthy school has an enrolment of 150 students or more," said chief superintendent Bryan Szumlas.

"As soon as we dip below the 150students mark, it requires additional money being invested in the school above and beyond the money that we take in from the provincial government to make it a viable school building."

Trustee Cathie Williams says given the ongoing uncertainty from the COVID-19 pandemic, she doesn't support starting this process now. (CCSD)

He said it "tears his heart apart" to even consider closing schools, but believes students will ultimately benefit.

"If they're integrated into a bigger school, there will be more opportunity for programming, more opportunity for extracurricular activities of course, in a world outside of COVID," he said.

"In bigger schools, you have more staff and, with more staff, you have more clubs and more everything else that's going on. In a small school, it's much harder to offer those extra things."

Trustee Cathie Williams was the only one to vote against re-starting the process.

"I don't disagree with the process we have in place;what I disagree with is that we're in an area of flux right now where we really can't predict what's going to happen," she said.

"I understand that we're in a budget constraint. I understand that we have to make some difficult decisions as we go forward. But in fairness to the communities that we serve, I don't feel this is the time we should be doing this."

Community consultation willtake place at the end of the month.

Trustees will vote to keep the schools open or to close them for goodon March 24.