The Anoka-Hennepin school board voted Monday night to close six schools -- five elementary and one middle school -- plus an early childhood center and a kindergarten center. Although two of the buildings will reopen with new functions, it is the first time since the 1950s that the state's largest district has acted to permanently shutter schools.
The move, which will take effect at the end of the 2009-10 school year, is an attempt to save money as the district grapples with declining enrollment and a daunting budget shortfall. The district says the closings will save it $3.1 million a year.
Two public board meetings this month drew 300 to 350 participants each, but on Monday there were only a few dozen people attending and no public discussion.
Board members considered a number of closing options before voting 5-1 for this plan. Board Member Scott Wenzel was the lone dissenting vote.
"Reading through this list, I almost felt we were reading an obituary, " said Board Member Kathy Tingelstad.
"There is no perfect solution," said Board Chairman Tom Heidemann. "We have too many empty classrooms districtwide. It does not make sense to fund empty classrooms."
Wenzel voted against the resolution, in part, he said, because the closings save the district $700,000 more than it needs to save because of declining enrollment.
The two schools that will get new functions are Park View Early Childhood Center in Champlin, which will reopen for the 2010-11 year as a regular elementary school, and Washington Elementary in Anoka, which will reopen as a sixth-grade campus for middle-school students.