under the plan, boundaries have also been simplified. in the past, some schools had boundaries that were roughly a square but also had a “panhandle” off to one side. school board planners have tried to straighten out those lines, ostafichuk said.
q: there has been an outcry from parents in some neighbourhoods in the urban area and the older suburbs. why have these neighbourhoods been particularly affected?
a: some schools in the urban part of ottawa and the older suburbs are less than a kilometre apart. this goes back to the days when there were two english public school boards in the city: ottawa board of education and carleton board of education.
those two boards and the cities around the urban core were amalgamated 25 years ago, but clusters of schools along the former boundary lines remained. some of these schools are under capacity, meaning the boundaries have to be shifted.
q: would “grandparenting” or phasing students out of schools over time help to avoid some of this upheaval?
a: because of the scale and complexity of the proposal, the plan allows for only a limited amount of phasing in and out, ostafichuk said.
while in an ordinary year 6,000 to 8,000 students change schools, under the proposal it will be 11,000 students in september 2026, when the plan will go ahead. that’s certainly an incredible change, she acknowledged.