
Steele Elementary School is currently under renovation and is slated to open for the 2024-25 school year.
Which schools Harrisburg students attend next year may be changing.
The Harrisburg School District on Tuesday discussed several options to reconfigure its grade level and building structures, including closing schools and moving students to new buildings.
At a board meeting, Superintendent Eric Turman presented three options that the district is currently weighing, which could include closing schools, renovating buildings and moving students around.
The most significant of the three options would take students out of Scott Elementary School on Derry Street and begin to use the district’s Lincoln Administration Building, on State Street, as an elementary school. The proposal also includes phasing out Rowland Intermediate School over three years and moving those students to Camp Curtin Middle School.
Additionally, in this scenario, Marshall Math Science Academy would move from enrolling 5th through 8th grade to only 6th through 8th grade students. Cougar Academy, which is currently housed in the Lincoln building, would move to the Hamilton building on N. 6th Street, replacing the Specialized Services Education, Inc. program, which would move to Scott temporarily.
According to Turman, this new configuration would help balance student body sizes at each building, create neighborhood schools on the elementary level, and allow the district to prioritize facility improvements at certain buildings.
“If there’s one thing I’ve heard from the community is how they loved and enjoyed neighborhood schools,” Turman said.
This proposal would, however, cause about half of elementary students to change schools.
Notably, the district is already implementing a significant change.
In May, the district broke ground on its project to renovate and re-open Steele Elementary School on the 2500 block of N. 5th St., which closed in 2011. Work on that building, which will house K to 5th grade students, is slated to be completed by August 2024.
Overall, Turman believes a bigger change is needed to create more “effective and efficient schools” and to take students out of Scott and Rowland, two schools that were previously office buildings.
“We had an option,” he said. “We could just say we are going to leave it at Steele and we are going to move forward, or are we going to swing for the fences?”
The district also has identified over $100 million worth of repairs, renovations and maintenance needed at its buildings in the coming years, which could include $23 million for renovations of Scott and Rowland, Turman said.
According to Turman, the district is also beginning to recover from enrollment loss due to COVID, which makes weighing reconfiguration important.
The two other options on the table are scaled-back versions of the most far-reaching plan. Option one would simply open Steele and eliminate 5th grade from Marshall Math Science Academy, and option two would include everything besides closing Rowland.
No matter which option is chosen, student redistricting would then need to take place, as Steele is slated to open for the coming school year.
In the coming weeks, the district will seek community input on the proposals before likely bringing forth a final proposal to Receiver Dr. Lori Suski in February.
“I want to make sure that when we pull this all together we know that this is exactly the direction we need to go,” Turman said.
For more information, visit the Harrisburg School District’s website.
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