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Nearly every elementary school in Vancouver's core has a waitlist for kindergarten, and parents are frustrated
CBC
For parents living in Downtown Vancouver with a child about to enter kindergarten, the month of February is inevitably stressful.
"We were waiting anxiously," said Jennifer Groenewold, who purchased a home in Vancouver's Crosstown neighbourhood across the street from Crosstown Elementary School, in the hope that her daughter could have an easy walk to school.
"I was under no impression that this was going to be easy peasy."
Crosstown, like virtually all schools in Vancouver's core, does not have enough space for the number of students that live nearby.
It means every February, hundreds of parents wait to hear back from the Vancouver School Board to see if their child was accepted to their catchment school — or if they're on a waiting list.
Groenewold's daughter was placed 15th on the waitlist. She now faces the choice of immediately accepting a spot in a school further away and having more time to plan for a longer commute for her daughter, or hoping enough students move schools so her daughter eventually gets in.
"For as long as I've lived in Vancouver … the pressures on the VSB have been largely unchanged and if anything are probably growing more acute, given the number of families that are living in the downtown core," she said.
"It seems like there's been a mismatch between a need that's been well recognised … and actions to alleviate stress on the system."
Vancouver's neighbourhoods in and around downtown have become denser in the last 30 years, but the number of new schools hasn't kept pace.
The VSB told CBC News that 14 schools have a waitlist, the same as last year — including nine of Vancouver's 11 elementary schools north of King Edward between Arbutus and Main street, and all four downtown schools.
Unlike previous years, the VSB did not provide the number of students on waitlists, which was more than 300 for the 2020/2021 year.
"While families make decisions on choice program offers, the waitlist numbers fluctuate greatly at this point in the year," said the VSB in a statement.
"In the coming months, the District will continue to manage waitlist and enrolment and determine placements for students that have been waitlisted at their full catchment school."
But Groenewold believes the VSB should be transparent with parents on what schools have had waitlists in previous years, and how many children on those lists have eventually been able to enrol.