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Montreal

Drummondville's only English elementary school gets $6M to expand

A $6.15-million investment from the Quebec government will allow the overcrowded Drummondville Elementary to build six new classes and a gym.

Quebec investment will allow overcrowded school to build 6 new classes and a gym

Students at Drummondville elementary eat lunch inside their classrooms because the school was forced to close its cafeteria due to a lack of space. (Rebecca Martel/CBC)

Drummondville's only English-language elementary school is getting the means to grow though just enough to ease the pressure on a 1950s-era building that's full to bursting.

The Quebec government announced Tuesdayit will invest $6.15 million to help Drummondville Elementary School, 100 kilometres northeast of Montreal, pay for a much-needed expansion.

The school was forced to close its cafeteria last summerto make room for two additional classes as enrollment climbed.

The school's population is increasing at a steady pace it's up 20 per cent since 2012.

Michael Murray, chair of the Eastern Townships School Board, said he would have preferred a new building that could accommodate the school's growing numbers.

In the meantime, though, thisinvestment willhelp.

"This is not a lump of coal," Murray told CBC News. "This is great news for the community because we will have adequate space to accommodate the current population."

Renovations to be done by2020

The money will allow the school to build five new classrooms, a kindergarten class for four-year-oldsand a gymnasium.

However, that may not be enough space in the long run,as parents are still clamouring to get their children into Drummondville'sonly English-language elementary school.

Many of the students are francophones whose parents are eager to have them become fluent in Englishand who have English eligibility certificates, by virtue of their parents having done some of their primary schooling in English in Canada.

"As the school continues to grow, we will have needs that will expand further, and we may be back at the government's guichetin the next few years saying that we'll still need more space," Murray said.

He said he expected the renovations to be completed by September 2020.

Earlier this year, French teacher Lucie Pellerin met with Grade 6 student Mathys Houle Phillips in the staircase, because there were no available rooms. (Rebecca Martel/CBC)

With files from Claude Rivest and Rebecca Martel