School-choice lottery season ended in St. Paul recently with hundreds of families still on the outside looking in at a familiar list of high-demand schools.
At Washington Technology Magnet School, a grades 6-12 building on the North End, the waiting list stood at 262 students.
Eighty-nine kids await openings at St. Anthony Park Elementary, while at two Montessori elementary schools, Nokomis on the East Side and J.J. Hill in the Summit-University area, the lists stood at 111 and 107, respectively.
St. Paul has had trouble, however, persuading families who've been shut out to take other options. As it faces the possibility of losing students to charter schools and nearby districts, a call has been issued to take a deeper look at the community and magnet school options under the Strong Schools, Strong Communities plan.
What that review looks like and what kind of change could result is still to come. But Steve Marchese, a first-year school board member leading the push, said last week he believed Strong Schools, Strong Communities was supposed to leave families confident they could find what they need for their children everywhere in the district.
"I think we're a long way from that," he said.
With her Strong Schools, Strong Communities plan, Superintendent Valeria Silva reduced the number of citywide magnets and emphasized neighborhood schools as the "heart of the community." In 2013-14, the city was divided into geographic zones, with community schools and magnets in each area. Two-year junior highs became three-year middle schools.
Marchese's proposal was inspired, in part, by developments in Area E in the city's northwest corner. There, St. Anthony Park Elementary is flourishing. Yet three miles away, Galtier Community School is losing students and is at risk of closing at the end of the 2016-17 school year.