Home

Eastern Passage Needs A High School

THE BEACON – OCTOBER, 2006

You have probably seen the signs around the community with regard to the need for a high school in Eastern Passage. I wanted to provide some background for those who may not know the history of our communities fight for a high school for our children.

I recall as a child that people would casually mention the need for a high school in the community. But it is important to note that in an urban area like HRM, high schools are built for at least 800 students. In rural areas, like Upper Musquodobit, the numbers are much lower.

The students of Eastern Passage have been attending high school in the Cole Harbour area for over forty years – first at Graham Creighton High School and now at Cole Harbour District High School. When these schools were built the suburban Dartmouth area had a student population that warranted one high school for all the communities. The schools were built in Cole Harbour as it was centrally located for all the communities – from Seaforth to North Preston to Eastern Passage.

In the early 1990s, when the student population warranted a second high school, the original plan was for a high school on Caldwell Road in Cole Harbour for the students of Colby Village and Eastern Passage. However, the final decision was to construct Auburn Drive High School one kilometre from Cole Harbour District High School – a decision that still defies logic.

Indeed, three of the four high schools in the greater Dartmouth area are located within a 1.5 km radius (Cole Harbour District High, Auburn Drive High and Prince Andrew High). Of course, the recent population growth in our community means our children are bussed a great distance to one of the schools located in the Cole Harbour area.

Having grown up in Eastern Passage, I graduated from Cole Harbour District High School in 1984. At that time there were approximately 200 high school students from Eastern Passage at the school. Though people discussed the need for our own high school, the student population did not warrant it.

Currently, there are 650 high school students from Eastern Passage at Cole Harbour District High School. Eleven busloads of students a day travel from our community to Cole Harbour. Over half the population of the school is from our community.

And the student population will only continue to increase. With over 700 new homes scheduled for construction in Eastern Passage in the next two years, the population of the community will exceed 15,000 by 2009, with over 700 students in Grades 10-12.

The first serious attempt to build a high school in the community was in 2001. Real estate agents and local residents may have discussed the option in the 1990s, but no serious effort was made until the provincial government requested a submission of construction priorities from the Halifax Regional School Board in 2001.

In 2001, the school board created a list of construction priorities and a high school for Eastern Passage was number 20 on the list. The provincial government approved the first four projects on the school board’s list of priorities.

In 2005, the Department of Education again requested a list of priorities from the Halifax Regional School Board and a high school for the Woodside-eastern Passage area was number three on the priority list.

Given the efforts of the school board to make a high school for the Eastern Passage-Woodside area a high priority, this is the first realistic chance our community has had to get a high school.

This month, the Provincial Cabinet will review a list of projects for approval. It is time for the community to do its part in sending a message to the government. Go online to www.easternpassagehighschool.com and sign the petition and send an e-mail to the Minister of Education. Or sign one of the hard copy petitions in local shops.

If approved, the proposal is for a fifth high school in the Dartmouth area to be located in the Eastern Passage-Woodside. In order to finish the job, there will be a site selection process in 2007-08 and our community will have to be diligent to ensure the site of the new school is located in our community.

As I have noted past articles, I wish the process was easier. If my Party had won government in either of the last two elections, we would have ensured that the high school would be built. I will continue to put political pressure on the Government, but the community must send a message to the Tory Government that this is an important issue.

This is a key moment in our quest for a high school of our own. Get involved!

Comments are closed.