With more portables slated for Moncton High School, parents demand better solution
CBC
The increase in portable classrooms to accommodate the growing number of students at Moncton High School has been "a gradual thing," said Angela Harris, a member of the parents' committee at the school.
The new Moncton High opened in 2015 and Harris says concerns about overcrowding started being raised by parents in 2020, according to the minutes of the parent school support committee meetings.
Now, she and Susie MacDow, another committee member, say with 12 portable classrooms at the school and four more slated to be added in the coming months, the provincial government and the school district need to come up with a better solution.
"Are we going to have 30 portables out there at some point?" Harris wonders.
Harris and MacDow say students can't all fit in the cafeteria at once so the school has two separate lunch breaks, and they say they have safety concerns about evacuating the school with hallways "insanely crowded" between classes.
"My daughter says you could never stop and talk to your friend in the hallway — you just have to keep going with the flow," said MacDow.
"It is not a real solution."
A spokesperson for the Anglophone East School District confirms that Moncton High School was designed to accommodate 1,230 students but is 30 per cent over capacity, with 1,600 students currently enrolled.
Stephanie Patterson said in an email that every portable is "connected to the school building via hallways" and that longer-term solutions are coming.
"We have a K-12 school in Shediac Cape which will take pressure off of Moncton High School along with a K-12 school in Dieppe which will take pressure off of MHS when they open," she said.
Patterson said those new schools should move about 800 students off the Moncton High campus, "however, that takes time."
Anglophone East superintendent Randy MacLean was not available for an interview, but will attend the next parent school support committee meeting and make a presentation to members about "enrolment pressures at MHS."
Harris's son is in Grade 10 this year, and she has a second child who will start high school in the fall of 2025.
She says new schools in Shediac Cape and Dieppe are good news, but students and teachers can't go on with the current situation for the two to five years it will take to build them.
The leader of Canada's Green Party had some strong words for Nova Scotia's Progressive Conservatives while joining her provincial counterpart on the campaign trail. Elizabeth May was in Halifax Saturday to support the Nova Scotia Green Party in the final days of the provincial election campaign. She criticized PC Leader Tim Houston for calling a snap election this fall after the Tories passed legislation in 2021 that gave Nova Scotia fixed election dates every four years.