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Published: Oct 21, 2009 02:00 AM
Modified: Oct 28, 2009 07:33 AM

Board draws boundaries for high schools
Riverwood part of Corinth-Holders
 
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SMITHFIELD - The Johnston County Board of Education has decided who will attend the two new high schools that will open next year.

When Corinth-Holders and Cleveland high schools open next year for freshmen and sophomores, they will ease overcrowding in western Johnston, which has seen steady population growth.

Even after four years, when all four grades are enrolled, the new schools will have room to spare. School leaders expect Corinth-Holders High, on Applewhite Road, will be 70 percent full by the 2013-2014 school year. Cleveland High, on Polenta Road in western Johnston, will be about 81 percent full.

"We've got to have room for these schools to grow," said Dr. Ed Croom, superintendent of Johnston County schools.

The attendance plan school leaders approved is slightly different from the proposal parents sounded off about during a public forum earlier this month in Clayton.

Some North Johnston High School students who were slated to go to Corinth-Holders will stay put. Parents who live in rural areas near Kenly said at the Oct. 1 forum that they feel a strong sense of community at North Johnston.

Also, some students who live in the Smithfield-Selma High School area will go to that school instead of Corinth-Holders.

The change means the Corinth-Holders school will be smaller than expected. The original plan called for enrollment to be at 80 percent capacity after four years.

School board members said they tried to listen to parents. But some families didn't get their wish.

At the public forum earlier this month, parents in the Riverwood community in Clayton complained the proposal would take their children from Clayton High to the new Corinth-Holders school. Some said they feel a strong connection to the Clayton community and want their children to attend Clayton's high school.

Under the final plan, though, those students will go to Corinth-Holders. Otherwise, Croom said, the new school would not have enough students.

"I'm a little disappointed, but I also understand," said Michael Grannis, a Clayton Town Council member. Grannis told school leaders at the Oct. 1 forum that he worried Clayton High could become an inner-city school if some students were shuffled elsewhere.

"Will that occur?" Grannis asked after the school board meeting last Tuesday. "We'll have to stay tuned."

On Tuesday, the school board agreed to allow current seventh-, eighth- and ninth-graders who have a sibling in high school to attend that school instead of going to one of the new schools.

Families must apply by Jan. 31 to be grandfathered into a school. If school leaders grant the request, families must provide their own transportation.

School board member Keith Branch said he understood the burden families would face if they had children attending two high schools. "I know how hard it would be to support two different kids," Branch said.

The changes affect all Johnston high schools except Princeton. While the attendance plan leaves room to grow at the new schools and West Johnston High School, other schools will be nearly full.

Four years from now, school leaders expect North Johnston to have reached full capacity. Smithfield-Selma will be nearly 97 percent full.

Croom has said those schools are in areas that are growing more slowly, so space is not as much a concern.

sarah.nagem@nando.com or 919-829-4758
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