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Fort Worth ISD pulls plan to close middle schools, moves forward with campus renovations

Morningside Middle School, pictured in May 2024, was among the middle school campuses facing closure in a district plan. School board members pulled the plan during a May 28, 2024, meeting.
Camilo Diaz
/
Fort Worth Report
Morningside Middle School, pictured in May 2024, was among the middle school campuses facing closure in a district plan. School board members pulled the plan during a May 28, 2024, meeting.

Fort Worth ISD school board member Wallace Bridges that parents and community members felt a proposal to close middle school campuses was a done deal.

Families felt their concerns about the impact of school closures on student transportation and neighborhood culture would go unheard due to a 鈥渓ack of trust鈥 between the district and communities, he said.

Two weeks later, Bridges feels like parents were heard loud and clear. More than five hours into their May 28 meeting, Fort Worth ISD board members pulled a proposal that would have consolidated seven district middle schools into three.

鈥淎t this time, the board is pulling all items regarding consolidations and proceeding with the renovations to each middle school,鈥 Camille Rodriguez, board president, said at the meeting.

The number of people who came out from across different areas of the city and were articulate about their concerns had a lot to do with the district changing course, Bridges said.

鈥淚 think that we sent the message to the community saying: I see you and I hear you,鈥 he told the Report.

The decision followed a series of where district officials presented their plans to close Daggett Middle School, McLean 6th Grade Center, Kirkpatrick Middle School and Morningside Middle School. They cited declining enrollment at those campuses as the reason for the move.

Under the plan, Daggett and McLean 6th Grade students would have transferred to McLean Middle School; Kirkpatrick students would have transferred to J.P. Elder Middle School; and Morningside students would have transferred to William James Middle School. Bridges and community members to even steeper enrollment decreases over the next several years.

Fort Worth ISD school board member Wallace Bridges listens during an August 2023 board meeting. Bridges was elected to the position in 2022.
Cristian ArguetaSoto
/
Fort Worth Report
Fort Worth ISD school board member Wallace Bridges listens during an August 2023 board meeting. Bridges was elected to the position in 2022.

The $1.2 billion bond passed in 2021 allocated millions of dollars for renovations at the campuses slated for closure. At the , it was revealed that Fort Worth ISD middle schools require $130 million in deferred maintenance needs. The district鈥檚 plan indicated that renovations to the schools would be costly and student consolidation would be more cost-efficient.

During the May 28 board meeting, community members, parents, teachers and students spoke out about their concerns of consolidating the middle schools. They cited the impact of closures on a student鈥檚 transportation time to school, the loss of crucial cultural institutions and higher student-to-teacher ratios.

Linda Miller, a Morningside resident for 63 years, said community members were concerned about potential decreased student and parent involvement due to traffic and transportation.

鈥淚f you vote to close Morningside, you are making the decision to put children in this neighborhood on school buses and transport them across the city,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淭his will certainly adversely impact them.鈥

Leo Vaughns Jr., an educator at Kirkpatrick Middle School for 34 years, said he believes the consolidation would cause schools to lose their community support and school spirit. Like several other speakers, he said using the bond money for renovations, as it was originally intended, would be the best solution.

鈥淭here is no place like home,鈥 he said. 鈥淚nstead of uprooting and consolidating our community, I ask you to please use the money that we have allotted for us to remodel and renovate our school which would preserve our legacy.鈥

Speakers also urged the school board to put off making a decision on closures until they evaluated other potential solutions.

鈥淚 agree that you need a lot more information and a lot more options so that you don鈥檛 make a hasty mistake or that you don鈥檛 do something that鈥檚 irresponsible,鈥 Laurie Owens, a librarian at William James Middle School, said.

Hearing from the affected communities led the board to look at consolidations with a different lens, especially in areas like the Historic Southside which would have lost its middle school, Bridges said. In the future, district officials will need to go into communities and listen more before making proposals on campus closures, he said.

鈥淚 think we鈥檙e going to be more transparent. There are lessons that we learned from this across the board,鈥 Bridges said. 鈥淎t the end of the day, it鈥檚 going to be better for our community, it鈥檚 going to be better for our city, and more importantly, because everything I do goes back to this, it鈥檚 going to be better for our kids.鈥

Georgie London is a reporting fellow for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at georgie.london@fortworthreport.org. 

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy .

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.