Lakeview fears annexation

By Adrian Sanchez asanchez@columbustelegram.com
Tuesday, Oct 14, 2008 - 03:55:06 pm CDT

COLUMBUS -- The potential for future annexation by the City of Columbus and Columbus Public Schools raised concerns from the Lakeview Community Public Schools Board of Education Monday.

During the board meeting, Superintendent Paul Calvert relayed some of the information discussed during a meeting between representatives of Lakeview and Columbus Public Schools, which included the Columbus Public Schools valuation concerns.

Because of those concerns and the northern growth of the city, Columbus may, in the future, annex properties within the Lakeview district, which would create financial problems for the Lakeview district, Calvert said.

“There are plans for annexation to the north in the next 10-30 years,” he said. “The annexation would occur with the plans for Columbus.”

Although states surrounding Nebraska have laws on the books that keep school boundaries in place following annexation, Calvert said, Nebraska does not.

“The legislation as it is written favors metropolitan areas,” Calvert said. He said he would try to work with state legislators to see if a law can be written similar to other states’.

The board also discussed the first reading of the option enrollment policy, which would formalize the guidelines already in place.

According to the current practice, the district accepts option enrollment students, on a first come first serve basis, into classes with less than 20 students at the elementary level and less than 85 students in high school classes.

Larry Mohrman, board member, said he supported the policy because it makes it clear when the district can and can not accept non-resident students.

“Our main priority needs to be our resident students,” Mohrman said, to those families that pay taxes and contribute to the district.

Ron Keller concurred, stating, “This takes the discretion out of it, which I like.”

A second reading is expected to be held during the November meeting.

The makeup of the district for the 2009-10 school year, when the transition occurs, was discussed as preliminary planning is being conducted.

The board decided in March on a temporary junior high solution to address issues of relocating the Sunrise Elementary School students and overcrowding at Shell Creek Elementary School. Kindergarten through sixth grade students from Sunrise will be divided between the Shell Creek and Platte Center elementary schools.

The Sunrise students must be relocated before September 2009, the deadline for the district to turn over the Sunrise facility to Archer Daniels Midland Inc., which purchased the building for $500,000 and donated an additional $1 million to the district in July 2007. ADM has said it intends to use the site as an employee-training facility.

Calvert said administration and staff are currently working on what the district will look like in terms of class numbers, staffing and curriculum.

Sunrise Elementary School Principal John Mlinar said preliminary plans are to have the students living in Country View attend Platte Center Elementary School. The decision would set enrollment at 140 students for Platte Center and 160 students at Shell Creek because 80 students would be sent to Platte Center and 30 to Shell Creek.

Lakeview High School Principal Bob Arp said with the addition of the seventh and eighth grade students to the high school, it is going to create space problems that they are trying to work through.

Calvert said the district is continuing to plan and prepare for the transition and hopes to have a final blueprint available by early 2009.

“We spent time trying to address those issues and hope to continue making progress each month,” he said. “We hope to have the plan by January or February.”

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golfball
Oct 14, 2008 8:50 PM
Interesting . . . . . .
tiny tim
Oct 14, 2008 10:00 PM
Where exactly does Lakeview's school district start??? I don't see the city growing and annexing past 53rd Street in the next 10-15 years...
The_SnowMan710
Oct 15, 2008 12:30 AM
what growth in the northwestern part? i'm w/ u tiny tim, i don't see it either. everythings growing to the east, has been for years. if anything, they should start worrying about annexing schuyler...
Voted most likely to secede
Oct 15, 2008 11:42 AM
I think they are waiting to put a viaduct over 53rd street so it should be at least another 90 years.
many questions
Oct 15, 2008 12:04 PM
This annexation, could it possibly benefit persons living north of Lakeview? say 5-10 miles, but are now in the Lakeview school District.
Could they possibly flow into the Humphrey School district? That would mean alot cheaper taxes

thanks in advance
allforone
Oct 15, 2008 5:48 PM
I quess this means we'll get city water and sewer and street sweeping?
Engineer
Oct 15, 2008 6:07 PM
Sounds like Lakeview hit the jackpot!
James
Oct 15, 2008 6:36 PM
Omaha has 4 public school districts in it. When the city of Omaha annexed Millard and Elkhorn, the school districts and boudries remained in tact to go along with OPS and District 66. I'm not sure why this would be any different.
Rachel
Oct 16, 2008 7:57 PM
As a resident in the Lakeview School system, I am upset about the possiblity of becoming a part of Columbus Public Schools. I moved out of town and placed by child in the Lakeview School system because of the smaller class sizes and more one-on-one attention. Not to say anything bad about Columbus schools. I started in the Lakeview system at 1st grade and graduated from there. I see no growth northward from where I live which is about 3 miles north of town. The city is only growing east. I think this town in general needs to stop trying to become another Omaha and focus on the problems in the town.
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