Skip and Julia Singer never really considered enrolling their sons in Minneapolis public schools even though they were assigned to some of the district's best schools.
Instead, the Singers chose the Fine Arts Interdisciplinary Resource School for its emphasis on the arts and its efforts to enroll a racially diverse group of students from across the west metro area.
Now hundreds of families, like the Singers, face uncertainty about the FAIR School's future as the West Metro Education Program (WMEP) considers a plan to relinquish control of the downtown campus to Minneapolis Public Schools and hand over control of the Crystal campus to Robbinsdale School District 281.
"We don't really trust Minneapolis," Julia Singer said. "If they assume control from WMEP, it's not going to be the school that we have gone to all these years."
The West Metro Education Program and the East Metro Integration District (EMID), two special integration districts that serve the Twin Cities, are both facing big changes as inner-ring suburbs grow increasingly diverse and the school districts they serve rely less on them to achieve racial balance.
Several east metro school districts are contemplating leaving EMID, saying the costs of membership outweigh the benefits of the district, which has changed its focus from magnet schools to professional development and student programs.
The upheaval comes at a time when many education leaders say racial equity work in schools is needed more than ever.
"I don't believe we are living in a post-racial society at all," said Kathy Griebel, principal at Harambee Elementary, which had been part of the east metro district. "Personally, I am 100 percent convinced that integration matters."