Pacifica Parents Take Legal Action Against School District to Stop Unjust School Closure

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 12, 2025

Fighting for Transparency, Equity, and the Future of Our Children’s Education

PACIFICA, CA – The parents of Ocean Shore School (OSS) and Vallemar School, along with Pacifica Citizens United, are taking a stand against the Pacific School District’s (PSD) decision on January 22, 2025 to approve the dismantling and forced reconfiguration of the district’s K-8 schools. This decision, made by the PSD Board of Trustees, was rushed through despite overwhelming community opposition and without proper legal compliance. In response, on February 7, the plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in Superior Court of California, County of San Mateo seeking an injunction to halt this reckless and unlawful action. This legal challenge, led by the OSS PTO Legal Task Force and Pacifica Citizens United, exposes the PSD’s violations of state law, lack of transparency, and the discriminatory reconfiguration plan that threatens the educational future of our children. Further legal developments are forthcoming, and we remain committed to holding PSD accountable through all necessary legal avenues.

“This is not just about saving one school,” said J.D. Fagan, Legal Task Force Parent Lead for OSS PTO. “This is about fighting back against a district that has deceived the public, ignored its own financial assessments, and rushed a plan that will permanently damage our community. We will not stand by while they bulldoze our children’s futures without accountability.”

Key Legal Challenges in the Lawsuit:

  1. Failure to Conduct Environmental Review (CEQA Violation) – The district failed to analyze the devastating impact of consolidating schools, including traffic congestion, school overcrowding, and the loss of local community schools, falsely claiming exemptions from California’s Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The law is clear—major changes like these require public study and review.
  2. Discriminatory & Segregated Schooling – The district’s plan eliminates K-8 programs for working-class and diverse student populations while protecting Cabrillo’s K-8 model, which serves the wealthiest and whitest student body in Pacifica. This deliberate resegregation violates state and federal education equity laws.
  3. Fraudulent Use of Taxpayer Dollars – The district misled voters to pass a parcel tax and bond measure, never disclosing their intention to close schools. They continue to waste public funds on construction at campuses slated for closure, violating taxpayer trust and potentially jeopardizing their tax-exempt bond status.
  4. Manipulating Enrollment & Capacity Data – The district inflated school capacity numbers to justify forcing relocated students into crowded conditions. , while hiding real student load limits set by state regulators. We are demanding truthful accounting of facilities and enrollment data before any closures occur.
  5. Illegal Brown Act Violations – The district conducted secretive backroom meetings, blocked parent involvement, and hid key information from the public. Their rushed decisions were made without proper public notice, input, or deliberation, violating California’s open government transparency laws.

A Fight for Transparency, Equity, and Justice

This lawsuit is not just a legal battle—it’s a movement to demand honesty, fairness, and respect from our district leadership. Parents and community members throughout Pacifica are uniting to safeguard our children’s access to a stable, high-quality K-8 education close to home.

“The district thought they could steamroll parents without consequence,” said Fagan. “But we are exercising our rights, standing up for our children, and fighting back against this abuse of power. We will not allow them to dismantle our schools through deception and unfairness. The antidote to secrecy is transparency, which we hope this lawsuit will help restore and uphold for the sake of our children, our schools, and our community.”

The lawsuit was filed on 2/7/25 with the Superior Court of the State of California, County of San Mateo.

Call to Action

We urge the Pacifica community to support this fight for our schools. We are seeking an injunction to stop the school closures, and we need your help to ensure that no school is closed without full legal review, transparency, and public accountability.

To contribute to the legal fight and stay updated, visit: https://www.gofundme.com/manage/save-ocean-shore-school-help-us-fight-for-our-future

### Media Contact:

J.D. Fagan
Legal Task Force Parent Lead, OSS PTO
vp@osspto.org

### About Ocean Shore School PTO
The Ocean Shore School Parent-Teacher Organization (PTO) is a non-profit community organization dedicated to advocating for students, supporting educators, and protecting the integrity of public education in Pacifica.

### About Pacifica Citizens United
Pacifica Citizens United is a grassroots community organization committed to government accountability, transparency, and the responsible stewardship of public resources. Dedicated to advocating for ethical governance and protecting the interests of Pacifica residents, the organization works to ensure that local decisions reflect the voices and values of the community.

Save OSS Update – February 12, 2025

The OSSPTO will provide weekly updates here to keep our community informed on the latest developments from the district regarding their resolution to dismantle K-8 education in Pacifica. We have been getting organized.

Legal Update

Our legal analysis has provided a clear framework for action. Our goal at this stage is to force the district to stop further harmful action immediately. To that end, OSSPTO initiated a lawsuit against the district on February 7, 2025, against the board’s resolution on January 22, 2025. More details about the lawsuit will be forthcoming. The courts will have to decide if the case warrants a stay on further action from the district.

The legal fight is expensive. Donate to fund the legal battle. 

Your donation will go toward legal fees, ensuring we can continue this battle. We are standing together to save Ocean Shore School!

District Listening Sessions

The district has concluded listening sessions. Now, the consultant will prepare a summary and recommendations to inform the board and district. As we understand it, a detailed report will not be published publicly. The transition plan presentation provides a brief summary of the themes raised.

What’s New on Transition Plans

The district is reviewing a draft transition plan at its February 22, 2025, board meeting. It is helpful to review the plan as the district has now drawn a timeline for the moves. The district has not engaged Ocean Shore School PTO formally in drafting these plans, but they have asked for more volunteers to be part of the visionary team (staff and administrations) and the transition planning team (parents). Please remember to fill out the form if you can join the transition team. Bookmark the district’s transition plan webpage if you want to keep up with everything as it unfolds.

Budget Review with the District

Two​​ budget review meetings have been held, and one more will be held this evening (February 11, 2025) at 6 pm over Zoom. Here are some key takeaways.

  • The total number of positions to be eliminated is a staggering 21. To accomplish this, our classrooms will be filled to the brim, and Ocean Shore and Sunset Ridge will likely have to share classrooms and teachers. How all this will work while preserving separate identities is hard to imagine.
  • The focus of these budget meetings has been entirely on anticipated savings from the transition plan. No breakdown of associated costs or consideration for loss of revenue that might result has been offered. 
  • No further insights have been gained on the faulty assumptions and incomplete decision analysis justifying the rushed decision by the Pacifica School Board to adopt the school reorganization plan on January 22, 2025

Got Questions? We’ve Got Answers.

We have a new Frequently Asked Questions page on our website: 

Catch up on what’s happening, our position, and key talking points. Also, find out more about what we are doing to protect our K-8 school. 

How You Can Help

  • Join an OSS Task Force
    Come to the In-Person Only PTO Meeting Feb 13, 2025 | 7-9 pm (MPR)
    We are not accepting the school board’s decision to shut down the Ocean Shore campus. We are choosing to fight and find an alternative path to save Ocean Shore. We also need a team to work on a smooth transition plan if we cannot stop this from moving forward. 
    Breakout Task Forces: Transition for K-5, Transition for 6-8, Resistance Effort, Charter Effort, 
    Teachers, staff, and alums are welcome to attend.
  • Protest before School Board Meeting Feb 12, 2025 | 4:30 pm 
    The Recall Team is holding a protest at the next Pacifica School Board Meeting to demand board resignations. Bring your signs and noisemakers. Where: District Office at 375 Reina del Mar Ave. Pacifica, CA

Save OSS Update – February 11, 2025

It has been another difficult week for a lot of us. 

  • We requested meetings with the district to better understand the finances. We have asked for detailed budget proposals for all the alternate scenarios. We have not heard back. Instead, we are left with unstructured, repetitive budget meetings that create more questions than clarity. 
  • The district has also completed their “listening sessions”. We are dismayed to know the mediator will report back to the district lawyers that hired her, and that the board’s actions (if any) to this feedback are unclear. 
  • We have also learned that many other members of our community are getting involved. The Gray Panthers are a multi-generational local advocacy group and will take their own course of action in the form of a tax-hold. Ocean Shore School PTO has not been part of this action. This group of seniors have previously been supportive of Bonds and Measures that benefit the students of Pacifica and they must have good reason to take this action.

I ask you to stay vigilant and unwavering in your support as we continue the journey to right this wrong in our school district.

Karen Kee, Co-President
Ocean Shore School PTO

I’m all in

I moved my family here to Pacifica from Oakland just for Ocean Shore School (OSS). We were looking at private schools for our oldest of 3 at the time. My godson was attending OSS and I fell in love with the school.

I had never seen a school like this before. Parents were using their skills in unison to give the students hands on learning. A tech dad was teaching coding, and still volunteers there today, and this was 20 years ago. A family of scientists taught science. Parents that were artists taught art.

Kids walked around school with dozens of parents greeting them in the halls by first names both student and teachers. Literally the magic brought me to tears that me and my children could be a part of this! I’m all in!

So we put our house up for sale in Oakland, bought one of the two homes for sale at the time in Pacifica, that we could not afford, and because it was a magnet district it didn’t need to be in Manor.

We were officially 7th on the waiting list for OSS. I went everyday to the office trying to sell myself, “I’ll work for free, I’ll drive every field trip, I have a ridiculous amount of skills to contribute.” Patricia was getting to know me.

“Well let’s see, you’re still 7th Tanya.” “That’s ok, see you tomorrow Patricia, bye Mr, Lorenzan.” I was not able to call him Mark yet. Ands that’s how it went. Two days before the school year started we officially got in, which is good because I had no backup plan.

I quickly kept my promise, becoming field trip coordinator and jumping right in. 20 years later, all four of my children have gone through this program. I continue to take on multiple volunteer jobs every year, I’ve taught the middle school yearbook team as a volunteer teacher and have taught over 200 students, who I still see, because when I said i was all in. I meant I am all in!

I still live in the same house I can’t afford. And I’ve built a life and family here, but not in the house my family sleeps in, but the house at 411 Oceana Blvd. That’s where my heart lives.

Now saying that they could move Ocean Shore’s hands on experiential learning program to anywhere, I will follow and continue to try to preserve this magic for generations to come. But breaking the program into two pieces, separating teachers that work their programs together. Because even though they are Kinder teachers and 8th grade teachers they collaborate to teach, both grades together. It shows the kinders that the oldest kids in the school are kind, gentle and will help you pick books from the library, read to you, and say hi to you on the play yard. That is a priceless gift.

The kindness, patience and compassion we have just taught both kinder and 8th graders didn’t start with us teaching our 8th graders to be kind humans. It came from 7 years prior when they were a little impressionable kinder who had an 8th grade buddy who was kind, gentle and patient and they said, I can’t wait till I’m a big kid like that. And I can’t wait be that for another student one day. They don’t know it at the time. But 7 years of that example set by the parents, teachers and peers. That is just who they become.

From the Ohana to all,
Tanya Perio Guido
Mother of Justice Dumlao 27 yrs (Alumnus and volunteer), Christian Guido 21 yrs (Alumnus and volunteer), Vincent Guido 19 yrs (Alumnus and volunteer), Dominic Guido 11yrs (6th grader ready to be that mentor like his siblings)
And adopted Auntie to 196 more Ocean Shore students

Rushed Decisions, Lasting Consequences: Rethinking the Plan to Close Ocean Shore School

A year ago Pacifica was told that if we made painful cuts to the school budget we would be on the trajectory to a better place. Now we are at a 3.1 million shortfall and once again looking at cuts – this time the closure of the entire Ocean Shore School (OSS) campus. At some point this rush to solutions needs to stop in favor of thoughtful planning. 

At the heart of the decision-making process is a report produced by the King consultancy, which was commissioned to assess enrollment trends and help guide budgetary decisions. While the report is an important tool, a closer look reveals that the case for such drastic action is far from conclusive.

The King report, which projects an average enrollment decline of 1.9% per year over the next seven years, does not provide a compelling justification for immediately closing a campus. When this modest decrease is compared to the district’s budget deficit, it is unclear why such an irreversible decision must be made immediately – less than two weeks after the proposal was made public! The report itself recommends regularly updating its analysis to monitor enrollment trends in an implicit acknowledgment that trends may shift due to factors not fully captured in the study. This cautious approach starkly contrasts with the urgency behind the proposed closures.

Further complicating matters is the lack of a clear plan to address capacity issues at other campuses. The King data shows that SSR and IBL already face capacity limitations. If OSS families cannot be accommodated at these schools, what is the district’s plan to mitigate the resulting overcrowding?

The demographic implications of closing OSS are also troubling. Supplemental data, such as that from GreatSchools, highlights that minority students are already more concentrated at OSS and SSR than at other district schools. Closing one of the more diverse schools in the district risks exacerbating inequities and creating adverse impacts for minority students. How were these consequences considered, and what steps will the district take to ensure equity for all student populations?

Additionally, the King report does not account for how its projections might be influenced by district actions—or inactions. For example, actively marketing transitional kindergarten (TK) opportunities to newly eligible families could significantly boost enrollment. If efforts were made to reduce the gap between TK and kindergarten enrollment by half, the district could more than offset next year’s projected decline. Conversely, failing to stabilize the district by closing schools may drive families out of the district altogether, compounding enrollment losses.

The numbers tell a stark story here: if just 8% of OSS families leave the district due to the closure, the projected decline for next year could double. How can we move forward with closures without fully understanding the ripple effects?

The decisions we make now will have long-lasting consequences for our students, families, and community. Before taking such drastic actions, we must ensure that all potential solutions and impacts are thoroughly analyzed and addressed. Rushing to close OSS risks doing more harm than good—not just to one school, but to the entire district.

Rather than rushing to implement potentially harmful cuts, we must slow down, gather more information, and ensure that our decisions are based on a full understanding of all the factors at play. Our children, teachers, and community deserve better than to be swept up in a decision-making process driven by incomplete data and rushed conclusions. It’s time to reconsider our approach.

Especially since we are constantly revisiting this issue with fixes that are not working long term.

David Hashemi
Workforce Analytics Leader, Pacifica Parent

A version of this post was also published in Coastside News as a letter to the editor on January 21, 2025.

Our Children Deserve More Than Secret School Closure Plans

When it comes to closing a neighborhood school, shouldn’t the community have a voice? Yet here we are, facing the proposed closure of Ocean Shore School—a decision that was deliberately obscured from public view. The district buried this bombshell in a February 28th Budget Collaborative meeting—so quietly that most parents still don’t know their children’s school might close. There was no public announcement. No press release. No email to parents. Instead, this life-changing decision was slipped into a routine budget discussion, virtually ensuring it would go unnoticed by the community. This wasn’t just poor communication—it was a calculated move to avoid public scrutiny.

The cloak-and-dagger approach worked exactly as designed: months later, many families remain unaware their children’s educational futures hang in the balance. There have been no town halls, no community forums, and no opportunities for meaningful parent or teacher input. This isn’t just poor planning—it’s a complete departure from legal requirements designed to protect our community’s voice in crucial educational decisions.

California law doesn’t treat school closures lightly, and for good reason. These decisions reshape communities, disrupt children’s education, and can exacerbate educational inequities. That’s why the state mandates specific steps: forming specialized committees, conducting thorough community engagement, and analyzing impacts on our most vulnerable students. These aren’t bureaucratic checkboxes—they’re essential safeguards for our children’s futures.

Yet our district has bypassed these crucial steps entirely. Instead of forming the legally required 7-11 Committee—a specialized group designed to evaluate school closures with community representation—they’re relying solely on internal administrative decisions. It’s not just using the wrong tool for the job—it’s making decisions behind closed doors that should be made in the open. 

Even more concerning is the district’s selective reading of their own demographic study. The King Consulting report actually recommends monitoring enrollment trends, not rushing to close schools. It doesn’t even account for upcoming mandated housing developments that will bring new families to our community. Are we making permanent decisions based on incomplete information, without any community insight?

Most troubling is the complete absence of an equity impact analysis. In an era where educational equity is paramount, how can we close a school without understanding how it will affect our most vulnerable students? The California Attorney General’s office specifically guided districts to conduct such analyses—guidance our district appears to be ignoring entirely.

This isn’t about opposing necessary changes. It’s about demanding the transparent, inclusive process that our community deserves, and the law requires. Our children’s education is too important for backroom decisions and hidden agendas. The district’s secretive approach isn’t just disappointing—it’s potentially illegal. California education code exists because previous communities learned the hard way what happens when school closures are rushed through without public input: fractured communities, displaced students, and decisions that look shortsighted in hindsight.

We’re not asking for endless delays. We’re demanding our legal right to be part of this process through:

  • Immediate establishment of a proper 7-11 Committee with genuine community representation
  • A comprehensive equity impact analysis shared with the public
  • A new timeline that starts with community engagement, not ends with it
  • Updated demographic studies that include all relevant factors and are openly discussed

Our school board has an opportunity—and an obligation—to halt this secretive process and start over with real community involvement. Taking time to do this right won’t just result in better decisions—it will restore trust and show our children that their education matters enough to warrant proper public discussion. 

The choices we make about our schools today will affect our community for decades to come. Let’s demand the open, legal process our children deserve, not decisions made in shadows. 

Crissie McBride, Pacifica

This post was also published in Coastside News as a letter to the editor on January 21, 2025.

Why Losing K-8 Schools is a Step Backward for Pacifica’s Students

This week, the Pacifica School District’s Board of Education will vote on a proposal that could dramatically reshape the educational landscape for our middle school students. The proposal seeks to reduce the availability of the K-8 school model, which currently serves 43% of Pacifica’s 6th, 7th, and 8th graders, by limiting it to just one school, effectively making the K-8 option accessible to only 17% of middle-grade students. In doing so, the Board would eliminate two K-8 schools—Ocean Shore and Vallemar—leaving only Cabrillo as a K-8 option. Kindergarten lottery numbers tell us K-8 schools are by far the more popular choice among families with 67% choosing a K-8 school.

At first glance, the shift may appear to be a minor administrative change, but it raises an important question: Are we sacrificing something valuable in the process? The K-8 model isn’t just a convenience—it has been shown to provide distinct advantages over the traditional middle school model, particularly during the crucial years of early adolescence.

The Case for K-8: Why the Shift Matters

In the 1970s, U.S. education experienced a shift toward the middle school model, with middle schools increasing more than sevenfold between 1,500 and 11,500. However, in recent years, cities like Baltimore, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and New York City have begun re-adopting the K-8 model, reversing the trend. Why? Because research has increasingly shown that middle school can be a time of academic and emotional turmoil for students, and the K-8 model offers a safer, more stable environment for navigating those turbulent years.

Two studies published in 2010 and 2012—the Columbia Business School’s Stuck in the Middle and Harvard Graduate School of Education’s The Middle School Plunge—found compelling evidence that the traditional middle school transition often leads to academic decline, increased dropout rates, and emotional struggles for students. The research highlighted several key takeaways:

  1. Academic Decline: Students transitioning into middle schools often experience significant academic setbacks.
  2. Long-Term Setbacks: These students continue to struggle with their academic performance through the 6th, 7th, and 8th grades.
  3. Dropout Rates: Students who attend middle school are more likely to drop out of high school compared to their peers in K-8 schools.
  4. Emotional and Behavioral Challenges: Early adolescence is a particularly vulnerable time, and the disruptions of transitioning to a new school can exacerbate emotional and behavioral issues.

In fact, several studies, including those in New York and Florida, show that students in K-8 schools have better academic outcomes, more stable peer groups, and fewer behavioral problems compared to their peers in middle schools.

Smaller K-8 Schools Benefit Neurodivergent Students

Smaller K-8 schools provide a supportive environment that reduces the need for costly accommodations, benefiting both children and budgets. As parent Tarra Knotts explains, “These struggling children are met where they are at… they are not made fun of or ostracized, they are treated like family because they have known them for up to 9 years.” Moving children to a larger middle school, especially during the difficult tween years, can disrupt this support. Research shows middle schools often have higher suspension rates, particularly for disadvantaged or disabled kids. In his book Lost at School, Dr. Ross Greene, PhD says, “Kids do well when they can.”

K-8 Schools in Pacifica: Test Scores & Beyond

At the district level, the data from Pacifica’s schools in 2023-24 reveal no conclusive academic advantage between students at K-8 schools and those at Ingrid B. Lacy (IBL) middle school when it comes to test scores in English Language Arts (ELA) and math. But test scores alone don’t tell the full story.

School climate plays a significant role in student success, and this is where the K-8 model shines. The middle school years are notoriously challenging for students, and the stability of staying at the same school from kindergarten through 8th grade provides a sense of continuity and community that can be crucial for emotional well-being.

One key indicator of school climate is chronic absenteeism. According to the California School Dashboard, IBL is struggling with higher absenteeism rates compared to the K-8 schools in Pacifica. Similarly, suspension rates are higher at IBL than at Ocean Shore, Vallemar, or Cabrillo. These disparities reflect the difficulties that middle school students often face in the traditional middle school model, where they are more likely to feel unsupported and disconnected within their school community. 

The Hidden Impact: Special Programs and Inequity

K-8 schools are more than the sum of their parts. Take Ocean Shore, for example, the school boasts an award-winning Oceans 411 program that elevates 7th and 8th graders to serve as marine conservation instructors to younger students. This project-based, cross-grade program has been a tremendous success, thanks in part to the collaboration between elementary and middle school students. If Pacifica moves forward with the proposed cuts to the K-8 model, programs like Oceans 411 will be significantly impacted, depriving students of a valuable educational experience.

Moreover, the decision to eliminate the K-8 model would disproportionately affect the north end of Pacifica, where Ocean Shore is located. This area has a higher percentage of disadvantaged families, and taking away the K-8 option could further entrench existing inequities. For many families in these communities, the K-8 model provides a crucial opportunity for stability and continuity, helping to bridge the gap for students who may otherwise face greater challenges in the traditional middle school system.

Conclusion: A Call for Equity and Better Options

If Pacifica is truly committed to providing quality education for all its students, it should not reduce access to the K-8 model, which has been shown to support better academic outcomes, foster emotional stability, and contribute to a healthier school climate.

As the Pacifica School Board makes its decision, it should consider the long-term effects on students, especially those in disadvantaged communities who stand to lose the most from this shift. Rather than dismantling a model that has shown tangible benefits, Pacifica should seek ways to expand and enhance the K-8 option for all students, ensuring that every child in the district has access to the stability, community, and educational opportunities they need to thrive.

I am urging our school board and the citizens of Pacifica to stand up for K-8 schools and not take a step backward for Pacifica’s middle school students. Let’s keep our options open, and ensure that all students—regardless of their background—have the chance to succeed in a supportive and nurturing environment.

LiLing Pang
Parent at Ocean Shore School, Pacifica, CA

A shorter version of this post was published in Coastside News as a letter to the editor on January 21, 2025.

A Tale of Two Districts: How Two School Districts Handled Similar Challenges Differently

We understand the financial realities that school districts across the country and Bay Area are facing due to declining enrollment. We are aware of other Bay Area communities and districts that are dealing with those same realities as us right now. However, the way the district has collaborated with members of these other Bay Area communities in finding solutions to these issues is as different as night and day to how our district has tackled this issue.

Take, for example, Berryessa Union School District—a K-8 school district in San Jose—that voted in December to close 3 of its 10 elementary schools. The Berryessa board took 8 months to make its decision. In April 2024, the district school board officially formed a School Consolidation Advisory Committee, which held 9 public meetings over the course of 6 months. This committee then published its formal recommendations in a report to the board in November, with the final decision coming one month later in December.

Now, consider how the Pacifica SD board has tackled this issue. It did not officially form a School Consolidation Advisory Committee. In fact, no public meetings were conducted to discuss options for school consolidation, and parents were hardly engaged at all.  In Pacifica, a committee met in private to form its recommendations and then unveiled them to the board on Saturday, January 11. Less than two weeks later, on 1/22/25, the board will vote on these recommendations. 

Drew Schmenner
Concerned Ocean Shore Parent

This post was also published in Coastside News as a letter to the editor on January 21, 2025.

An open letter to the Pacifica School District Board

I am writing as a staff member, alumni parent and community member of Ocean Shore School (OSS). I happened to be one of two OSS community members to be invited to the budget meetings on January 8 and 9. It was clear that the cabinet had set their eyes on closing the Ocean Shore site and relocating its staff and teachers to two different sites, essentially shuttering the program that has been in existence for over 50 years. 

As a staff member and alumni parent, I was devastated. As I processed the full meaning of the proposals drafted by the cabinet, I sought to come up with any plan that would help us keep our K-8 school community and family together. Each plan was met with a, “No, we can’t do that!” with very little detail into why none of those plans were feasible.

Our school’s unique program includes many pieces that cannot be transferred to a K-5 setting. Our huge commitment to cross-age collaboration includes reading buddies, STEM buddies, play buddies and teacher aides and helps build healthy relationships across large grade spans and increases the social emotional well-being of all of our students.

Our Oceans 411 program, which has received over $100,000 in grants, relies on our middle school students to run effectively. This program will not survive the separation of our middle school teachers and students who are an integral part of its planning and implementation. These unique features of our program that are not represented elsewhere in our district will be lost if this proposal goes forward.

This school year, the OSS community felt like we finally had positive leadership, strong morale and were beginning to recover from multiple losses. The rumors of closing our campus and the elimination of what our program provides, has meant that teachers are receiving multiple requests for private school applications. I believe that not only will you lose many highly qualified teachers that feel their voices aren’t being heard, but many families who want a smaller, more connected, K-8 community. There are many private schools very close to OSS that offer this. At least one charter school, based on our 50-year-old program, has contacted our community to gauge interest. I would hate to lose these valuable members of our community.

Losing any portion would be hard but losing a large portion to private or charter schools would mean any cuts you make now ineffective. The threat of county and state takeover is causing you to feel that you cannot hit pause and consider other options that would be able to keep our community together. Please listen to the voices of the people you serve, not just the cabinet that does not live here and do not see the students they serve as tiny humans who will be harmed by being uprooted from their school family. I hope that you are also feeling the pressure to look into other options. The budget should not be balanced on the backs of one school community.

Having a K-8 option on only the south edge of town is not an equitable solution for all students in Pacifica. While many students flourish at the comprehensive middle school, many are more successful in the K-8 model. Currently 43% of middle school students choose and thrive in this model. If you close Ocean Shore and Vallemar’s middle school’s programs, then only 17% would have this opportunity and only students who live in the south end of town would be geographically near one of these schools.

I implore you to look for options that are equitable for all students in our town and that preserve a long-standing program that provides many benefits to all who it serves. 

Michelle Zuromski
Kindergarten Teacher
Ocean Shore School, Pacifica

This post was also published in Coastside News as a letter to the editor on January 21, 2025.

School District Proposal to Dismantle Successful Pacifica K-8 School is Being Cloaked as Relocation

Pacifica, CA – Ocean Shore School (OSS) is the only K-8 school in Pacifica that provides an immersive project-based learning and parent participation program in the district. This award-winning school has a 50-year history of providing excellent education in Pacifica. It is now under threat.

The Pacifica School District is proposing to dismantle Ocean Shore’s K-8 school. The proposal will have the school’s 6-8 graders absorbed into an existing middle school in the city. And the K-5 program will relocate to share classrooms with another K-5 school. This plan will destroy one of the foundations of this much-loved and unique educational pathway. It will also reduce educational choices for all students in Pacifica. 

This proposal aims to balance the district’s budget and fill a possible cumulative 3 million dollar deficit over 3 years. While the school district insists that this is not a school “closure” but a “relocation”  – as school closures are governed by due process in the California Educational Code –  families who have benefited from this school argue that this change will essentially result in the school being shut down.

On January 11, 2025, the Pacifica School District convened a board meeting where they invited parents to attend and learn about the possible restructuring and consolidation of schools in the district. The board was presented with only one solution to the budget shortfall – which was to merge the 6-8 grade students from two of only three K-8 schools into the dedicated middle school in the city. And to relocate Ocean Shore School’s K-5 program onto another school site. 

The Pacifica School Board is due to vote on this proposal on Wednesday, January 22, 2025 only 11 days after presenting this proposal for the first time, with no further opportunity for wider discussions with the parents and wider community partners. “This is a school closing,” says Kendra Vera, co-treasurer, Ocean Shore School. “There is a very specific legal process that school boards have to go through for a closure, and we’re asking the board to go through that process”.

Pacifica parents and taxpayers are outraged by the Pacifica School District’s lack of transparency and community collaboration after they worked hard to pass a school funding measure last November. They are calling for the school board to put an immediate pause on these proposals and to convene a much wider collaborative group to help resolve the budget deficits which are the main reason for the proposed school closure.

Media Contact

Karen Kee
Ocean Shore School PTO
president@osspto.org

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