Hoquiam school board votes to close Central Elementary

May 18—In a move to reconcile building space for its chronically dwindling enrollment, the Hoquiam School District Board of Directors Thursday evening voted unanimously to shutter Central Elementary School.

The school won't close for at least another full school year, the earliest date being fall 2025. The district still needs to decide on future configurations of grade levels and classes among the four remaining buildings, which will likely happen next year, said Hoquiam Superintendent Mike Villarreal.

No employee downsizing will be associated with the closing of Central, according to district officials.

"We've tried to be very, very fair," Villarreal said. "It's a tough decision, and there's a lot of emotion tied to that, and people have feelings and lot of questions — 'what next?' — and all those things. But we've got some time, and we've got some work to do."

"It's not a five-year decision, not even a 10-year decision, this is a 30-year decision about buildings."

The district held a series of six community meetings over the last month and a half to gather public input on which school to close down. At a March 30 meeting, the school board decided officially to shrink the district by one campus. At that time it was already apparent the decision was between Central or Emerson elementary schools — Hoquiam Middle School and Hoquiam High School are each unique to the district, while Lincoln Elementary was recently remodeled and would mean a loss of investment if closed.

Board member Chris Eide said the decision was "not an obvious choice." Both schools are similar in size and needed similar investments for repairs, although Emerson will require slightly more money at $3.1 million as opposed to Central's $2.2 million.

Closing Central will allow the district to reallocate that money to repairs elsewhere, and put the district in a more optimal position for future funding.

On Thursday evening, Eide held up a spreadsheet — a list of public opinions derived from community meetings stating which school should be kept and why. The opinions were, for the most part, divided.

The vote, however, after a motion from board member Tanya Anderson, passed without controversy or disagreement between board members.

"I'm surprised this was unanimous, honestly," said board member Hoki Moir directly after the vote.

Board members assured they had not discussed the matter outside of the public meetings, crediting the community engagement process with working out the kinks of the issue. Villarreal added he didn't provide his opinion on the matter throughout the process.