Santa Rosa City Schools
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Santa Rosa City Schools are the combination of two school districts in Santa Rosa, California: the Santa Rosa Elementary School District (grades K-6) and the Santa Rosa High School District (grades 7–12).[1] The combined districts have over 16,000 students in nine elementary schools, five middle schools, six high schools (including one alternative high school), one K-8 arts charter school, one 5-6 accelerated charter school, one Spanish language dual immersion charter school, one French language dual immersion charter school, and several child care programs. Eight other elementary school districts, Bellevue Union, Bennett Valley Union, Kenwood, Mark West Union, Piner-Olivet, Rincon Valley Union, Roseland Union, and Wright, feed into the high school district.
School Closures
[edit]In November 2024, the Santa Rosa City Schools District Board started to confront a $20 million deficit which had to be met through staff cuts, school closures, and internal cuts.[2]
In February 2025, the district board decided to close three elementary schools (Albert Biella, Brook Hill, and Steele Lane elementary schools) and three middle schools (Herbert Slater, Hillard Comstock, and Santa Rosa middle schools) which as a result would turn four high schools (Montgomery, Santa Rosa, Piner, and Elsie Allen high schools) into K7-12 schools.[3][4][5]
In March 2025, due to controversial mass firings at Maria Carrillo High School, 1/13th of the student body and 56 staff at the school protested at the district's office demanding answers regarding the rationale for firing most of their administrative staff.[6][7] Eventually, the protest was geared toward advocating the removal of Superintendent Dr. Daisy Morales.[8]
Attendance area
[edit]The elementary school district includes the central portion of Santa Rosa. The high school district additionally includes almost all of the remainder of Santa Rosa, as well as a small portion of Windsor and the following census-designated places: Fulton, Kenwood, and Larkfield-Wikiup.[9]
Schools
[edit]List of some of the schools in the districts:
- Albert F. Biella Elementary School (Pending closure)[3]
- Brook Hill Elementary School (Pending closure)[3]
- Luther Burbank Elementary School
- Hidden Valley Elementary School
- Helen Lehman Elementary School
- Abraham Lincoln Elementary School
- James Monroe Elementary School (see Monroe District)
- Proctor Terrace Elementary School
- Steele Lane Elementary School (Pending closure)[3]
- Hilliard Comstock Middle School (Pending closure)[3]
- Rincon Valley Middle School
- Santa Rosa Middle School (Pending closure)[3]
- Herbert Slater Middle School (Pending closure)[3]
- Santa Rosa High School (Pending merge into K7-12)[3]
- Montgomery High School (Pending merge into K7-12)[3]
- Elsie Allen High School (Pending merge into K7-12)[3]
- Piner High School (Pending merge into K7-12)[3]
- Maria Carrillo High School
- Ridgway High School (Continuation)
- Santa Rosa Charter for the Arts (k-8) (Formerly Fremont Elementary School)
- Santa Rosa Accelerated Charter School
- Santa Rosa French-American Charter School
- Cesar Chavez Language Academy
Administration
[edit]The District is run by one board of education which is elected based on the High School District boundaries. There are seven trustees, each elected for four-year terms. Some are elected on the presidential election cycle and some are elected on the off-year cycle. The trustee areas were created in late 2018 at which time the at-large election process was abandoned.[10][11]
Elementary School Administration
[edit]
The Elementary School District is administered by the same board of education. Two of the trustees are prohibited from residing in the Elementary District. The other trustees may or may not live in the Elementary District. The 2020-2022 Board has four trustees who do not live in the Elementary District and three trustees who live in the District.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Bond Overview". Santa Rosa City Schools. Retrieved December 7, 2024.
- ^ https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/school-closures-cuts-santa-rosa-sonoma/
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/santa-rosa-city-schools-campus-closures/
- ^ https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/a-look-back-history-of-the-6-santa-rosa-schools-that-will-close/#:~:text=Albert%20Biella%2C%20Brook%20Hill%20and,back%20at%20how%20they%20started.
- ^ https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/school-closure-santa-rosa-decision/#:~:text=Santa%20Rosa%20High%20School%2C%20Piner,by%20closing%20current%20charter%20sites.
- ^ https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/santa-rosa-school-staff-absences/
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSYDjtcv20k
- ^ https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/santa-rosa-city-schools-closures-budget-cuts/
- ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Sonoma County, CA" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved December 7, 2024. - Text list
- ^ "Trustee Area Information". Santa Rosa City Schools. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
- ^ "FAQs About Trustee Area Elections". Santa Rosa City Schools. Retrieved June 20, 2021.