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New Brunswick

Enrolment surge continues in Moncton-area schools even as new buildings open

A new middle school opening this week in Moncton's west end relieves some of the capacity pressures on other schools in the region, but Anglophone East's superintendent says they still need nine new schools.

Anglophone East adding 26 portable classrooms, Francophone South says more schools needed

A bald man in a dark blue jacket and light blue dress shirt smiling in an office with various photos in the background.
Randolph MacLean, superintendent of the Anglophone East School District, says enrolment has risen to more than 20,100 students. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Two southeast New Brunswick school districts say they're continuing to see significant enrolment growth that's putting pressure on capacity even as new schools open.

Thousands of new students have enrolled in recent yearsin the anglophone and francophone districts serving the Moncton area.

Statistics Canada reported recently the region had one ofCanada'sfastest-growing populations,mainly driven by international migration.

It's led to students being taught in spaces such as libraries, cafeterias and portable classrooms.

"We really, really need to have new schools built,"Monique Boudreau, superintendent of Francophone South, said in an interview.

"They're not built in a year. We can't have the parking lots full of mobile classrooms like we had at cole Le Sommet and five or six of our different schools."

A woman with blond hair in a suit jacket stands in a hallway with school lockers along the walls in the background.
Monique Boudreau, superintendent Francophone South, says the district needs more schools to keep up with enrolment growth. (Frdric Cammarano/Radio-Canada)

Francophone South, which includes Fredericton and Saint John,has about17,500 students enrolled in its 38 schools.That's up 530from last year, afigure Boudreau expects will rise to about800 in the coming weeks.

Around 60 per cent of the growth is in the Moncton region, Boudreau said.

Randolph MacLean,Anglophone East's superintendent, says enrolment has topped 20,100, up about 900 from last year.

"Enrolment it continues to climb,"MacLean said. "It's very, very exciting."

WATCH | 26 portable classrooms added to schools in Moncton-area district:

Anglophone East adding portable classrooms as enrolment grows

6 days ago
Duration 0:45
The Anglophone East School District is adding 26 portable classrooms at schools in the Moncton area to keep up with growing enrolment.

The district requested 26 more portable classrooms from the province, bringing its total to 85. Some of those portable classrooms are already in place, while others will be added over the coming months.

If all goes to plan, a new middle school in Moncton's west end opens its doors Tuesday. The Wabanaki School has a capacity of783 students, and MacLean said 730 students are enrolled there.

The opening is expected to easecapacity pressurein several schools around the city that had converted non-teaching spaces to classrooms.

One downtown school,Edith Cavell, will once again have a library.Northrop Frye's cafeteria is once again a cafeteria.

The district has requested the province build or upgrade nine schools. Planning is underway for new or larger schools in Shediac, Dieppe and Salisbury.

While the Anglophone East district education council was told in February thatthe Shediac site was expected to be announced soon, MacLean said the province is still working on that.

He said it should affect the construction schedule. The education council was told in February that construction would start in 2025-26, with the school open in 2027. The council was told the school offering kindergarten to Grade 12 could have a capacity of 1,000 students.

Even when new schools open, they've quickly filled.

One-storey buildings with wooden staircases leading to doors.
A row of portable classrooms outside Shediac Cape School in 2023. (Pierre Fournier/CBC)

The newly completedLe MascaretandClaudette-Bradshaw schoolsin Moncton are already full, Boudreau said.

More students also means more teachers, bus drivers and other support staff.

Boudreau said Francophone South still had a few teaching positions it needed to fill as of last week but was in a better position this year compared tolast year.

MacLean said Anglophone East has added about 300 teachers over the last three years.