Officials alter rezoning plan

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Columbia County school system administrators presented a revised high school rezoning proposal on Tuesday that could affect high and middle school zones for the 2009-10 school year.

The high schools are being rezoned to prepare for the opening of Grovetown High School on Chamblin Road in 2009.

The revised option, detailed at a public hearing at Greenbrier High School on Tuesday, would rezone the area on William Few Parkway south of Magnolia Drive to Columbia Road from Greenbrier High to Grovetown High. The power lines would serve as the boundary.

Under the original proposal, the William Few Parkway area south of Magnolia Court to Columbia Road was rezoned from Greenbrier to Grovetown High.

"We're trying to keep the neighborhood intact," said Robbie Jarrell, the assistant superintendent of student support.

The new proposal also revamped areas that could be rezoned from Greenbrier Middle to Harlem Middle in 2009.

One option would send pupils who live in the Columbia Road area from Appling-Harlem Road to Louisville Road to Harlem Middle.

A second option would relocate pupils living in the areas north of Interstate 20 to Cobbham Road and north of Cobbham Road west of Ray Owens Road from Greenbrier Middle to Harlem Middle.

"That would take all of Greenbrier Middle School out of Harlem High School," Mr. Jarrell said.

He said the board could approve one or both of these options and that changes resulted from parental input after the first rezoning hearing March 20.

Appling resident Bill Smith, who has a 10th-grader, was happy.

"My son goes to Greenbrier now, and it looks like (he's) zoned for Greenbrier now," he said after studying a map of the zones.

Reach Betsy Gilliland at (706) 868-1222, ext. 113, or betsy.gilliland@augustachronicle.com.

MOVING STUDENTS

School populations would see a big shift with the addition of Grovetown High School. Here are high schools' instructional capacity versus projected enrollments for 2009-10:

SCHOOL CAPACITY* ENROLLMENT
(CURRENT ZONES)
ENROLLMENT
(NEW ZONES)**
Evans 1,806-1,892 2,203 1,770
Greenbrier 1,680-1,760 2,162 1,535 or 1,565
Grovetown 1,806-1,892 1,210 or 1,230
Harlem 1,134-1,188 1,355 806 or 826
Lakeside 1,680-1,760 1,540 1,740

* Based on 21-22 students per class


** Depending on which option is approved

Source: Columbia County Board of Education



WHAT'S NEXT?

The Columbia County school board is expected to approve the final rezoning plan at its April 22 meeting.

Comments

mommyoftwo

o.k. I've listened to all the whining I can take on this. I was one of the "unfortunate" few that had to move from Evans to Lakeside when they built it, and our parents did not whine about it at all. The decision was made by the BOE and that's all that was said. None of us wanted to go, because we were being taken away from the friends that we had grown up with, . Nobody liked it but in the end it was one of the best things that could have happened to me. Why is everyone so worried about being rezoned out of Greenbriar. Yeah, right now they seem to be the powerhouse for athletics but there is more to school than that. If my children were old enough now to be involved in this, I would worry more about their academics than their athletics. One will take you much further in life than the other, and if you're not sure which, maybe your parents should have thought about that too.

wise ole man

AMEN!!!!!!!!! Is it over now?

gnx

Gawd I hope so! I cannot believe the amount of whining and crying that's been going on over this. I'm totally ticked that my school tax dollars have had to be used to fund the extra cost this furor has caused. The way I look at it if you don't like the decision made by the BOE, sell your house and move to where you are in the zone you want to be in. Cry that river, build that bridge and get the heck over it!

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