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On February 8, 2024, the Fairfax County School Board approved the FY 2025-29 Capital Improvement Program, with the amendment to include Parklawn Elementary in the Priority Recommended Boundary Adjustments table, with potential boundary scoping in the Fall of 2024 or Spring 2025. This inclusion of Parklawn Elementary in the approved CIP will allow staff to address the current and projected capacity deficit, student membership growth at the school, and the number of temporary classrooms at the school.
As of SY 2023-24, the school is at 96% capacity utilization and is projected to be at 112% in SY 2028-29. The school currently utilizes 19 temporary classrooms and a 10-classroom modular building.
School and division staff, along with the Fairfax County School Board, are working with the community to determine the best way to address the capacity challenges facing Parklawn Elementary School.
Fairfax County Public Schools is also conducting a divisionwide review of school boundaries. The first set of community meetings for this larger effort will take place between mid-November and mid-December. The meetings for Parklawn Elementary School are separate from the divisionwide review.
Information on current engagement opportunities will be shared with the Parklawn community as they are scheduled.
The public is invited to provide input on the scope of a boundary study to address capacity challenges at Parklawn Elementary School. Two community meetings, one virtual and one in person, will be held during the next few weeks:
Each meeting will include the same presentation and feedback opportunities. Language interpretation will be available at both meetings.
Information will be updated once it has been shared and engagement has occurred.
For boundary adjustments, the Division Superintendent is directed to consider the need to make adjustments governed by School Board Policy 8130.
Learn more about the boundary policy review.
Priority recommended boundary adjustment options and program changes are included in the annual Capital Improvement Program (CIP) for future consideration only
The Capital Improvement Program (CIP) identifies projects such as new construction, capacity enhancement, renovation, and potential site acquisitions. In a district as large as Fairfax County, the number of possible CIP projects is large. The School Board, with information and guidance from FCPS staff, votes on proposed projects to be included in the CIP every year. It may take many years, sometimes decades, for a project to make it into an approved CIP package.
The CIP is a management tool used to coordinate the location, timing, and funding of identified capital projects over five years. Because the scope of the CIP is extensive, and the process is multilayered, it can be confusing. Learn more about the CIP.
Every two years, Fairfax County voters have an opportunity to vote on the school bond referendum and support student success. This action is necessary because the building and renovation of schools is not financed through the school district’s operating funds. Learn more about the Bond Referendum.
For additional information on boundary studies, please contact the Office of Facilities Planning Services at 571-423-2320 or you may submit your inquiry or question online.
Boundary adjustment approved by School Board to address capacity challenges across all McLean elementary schools, with a particular focus on the needs of Kent Gardens Elementary.
Background information on previous engagement. There is no active study underway.
FCPS engages in the Capital Improvement Program (CIP) process on a regular cycle, with construction and renovation projects in various stages and impacting a variety of stakeholders.
Three middle schools in the Mason District of FCPS currently house sixth grade students, which is a different set-up from all other middle schools across all other districts.
The School Board approved adding a boundary adjustment for McLean HS to the list of recommended priority boundary adjustments in the CIP
A boundary adjustment addressed overcapacity in some elementary schools in the Justice High School pyramid.