Charlottesville City Schools staff reviewed a proposed elementary school rezoning plan on March 27 designed to address projected overcapacity at Summit Elementary and rebalance socio-economic status (SES) across schools. The superintendent’s January recommendation includes a phased approach to boundary changes and a proposal to amend Policy JC (school attendance zones) to permit rezoning-related out-of-zone applications.
Why the change: Staff said projected development and approved in-progress housing would push Summit’s enrollment well past capacity — in some scenarios more than 40% over within the next decade — and that Summit has no practical expansion option. The plan aims to get ahead of development-driven enrollment pressure while balancing other priorities such as walkability and neighborhood preservation.
Phasing and family options: The district presented a phasing chart showing that most boundary changes would not take effect until 2029–30, with smaller, immediate adjustments in areas where no students currently reside. The phased schedule is intended to minimize student transitions and allow families time to prepare; families would be offered options including applying for an early transfer or submitting an out-of-zone exemption to remain at their current school under stated parameters. Staff noted transportation for early movers would not be guaranteed but that exemptions would be available under policy.
Policy change: To implement the phasing and family choices, staff proposed updating Policy JC so rezoning is an allowed reason to apply for out-of-zone attendance. The current policy already allows out-of-zone attendance for childcare and for students who began attendance before a move; the recommended change would add rezoning as a third, defined reason and streamline an online application process.
Public input and concerns: Public commenters raised concerns about walkability losses and neighborhood impacts, with a written letter read on behalf of neighbors asking the board to pause and include a transportation study. Board members discussed whether the policy should include a periodic review requirement; staff said the district will monitor housing development and enrollment annually and report back as part of enrollment updates.
Next steps: The rezoning recommendation remains at the informational/first-reading stage; staff will move to bring the policy amendment and any final rezoning action forward per the board’s legislative calendar. Board members suggested small edits to the draft policy language during the meeting and requested continued monitoring of development and enrollment projections.