With many Louisiana and Mississippi schools expected to open this week for the first time since Hurricane Katrina savaged the Gulf Coast, school leaders were working hard last week to prepare despite uncertainty over how many students would actually show up.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l really know until Monday,鈥 Oct. 3, said Carrolyn R. Hamilton, the superintendent of Long Beach school district in Mississippi, which had an enrollment of 3,200 students before the storm. 鈥淵ou just have to be patient and find out.鈥
Many school systems in southeastern Louisiana and coastal Mississippi have been closed since Katrina approached in late August. At least eight districts were expected to reopen schools this week, though not all buildings would be usable. Some other districts have already reopened, but in some of the hardest-hit areas, such as New Orleans and St. Bernard Parish, no firm date has been set for reopening schools.
Besides uncertainty over enrollment, administrators were unsure last week how many of their employees would return. Some were worrying how they would make their payrolls in the long term, while others were awaiting portable classrooms already overdue.
In districts reopening this week, how many students to expect was one of the biggest question marks.
See lists of Louisiana and Mississippi school districts鈥 reopening status,
鈥淲e can all speculate, but I don鈥檛 think any of us do know,鈥 said Jeff Nowakowski, a spokesman for the Jefferson Parish district near New Orleans, which had 46,000 students. Eighty out of 84 schools in the system鈥攆ar more than originally anticipated鈥攚ere scheduled to reopen Oct. 3.
For his part, Glen V. East, the superintendent of the Gulfport district in Mississippi, got a clue about enrollment last week, when his district鈥檚 high school reopened.
鈥淲e鈥檙e about 80 percent strong,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e were a high school of about 1,600, and now we鈥檙e a high school of about 1,250.鈥
Of those students, 42 were newcomers, he said. The K-8 programs were scheduled to resume this week. The district had 6,200 students before the storm.
Textbooks Lost
Districts planning to reopen Oct. 3 were making final repairs last week to meet that target.
鈥淲e have contractors and cleaning crews鈥 in the schools, said Henry Arledge, the superintendent of Mississippi鈥檚 Harrison County district, which had 13,000 students. 鈥淲e think by the weekend we鈥檒l be in pretty good shape.鈥
The district, like many others in Mississippi, was still awaiting portable classrooms promised by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Mr. Arledge said his district was to get 36 portables, and had thought they would have arrived already.
He said that a middle school will be running double sessions until the portables come.
The damage in the Harrison County system wasn鈥檛 just to buildings. Textbooks, furniture, and supplies took a hit, too. Mr. Arledge estimates that his district lost at least $220,000 worth of textbooks alone. He added that more than 280 district employees lost their homes.
Despite the upheaval, Mr. Arledge is seeing signs that life is slowly getting back to normal. Last week, two district high schools played football games for the first time since the storm. One team lost an away game, but in the home game, Harrison Central pulled out a 21-14 victory.
The St. Tammany Parish district in Louisiana, which had 37,000 students, also was aiming to open Oct. 3.
Linda E. Roan, a spokeswoman for the district, said most schools would be ready then, though as many as six might have to open later. A few schools will run split schedules.
Like officials in other systems, Ms. Roan said she didn鈥檛 know yet how many students to expect.
鈥淲e have asked principals to phone parents, to let them know if the students are coming back, so we have a bit of an idea so we can plan,鈥 she said.
The number of teachers was also not fully clear.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have firm numbers on employees either,鈥 Ms. Roan said. 鈥淏ut I will tell you that we made every effort to contact our employees, and to have them contact us through as many venues as we could find.鈥
Superintendent Hamilton of Mississippi鈥檚 Long Beach schools said she expected most of her teachers to return. She knew of three, as of last week, who were not planning to come back.
Of the five schools in her system, one was completely destroyed, but the rest were slated to reopen this week. Two elementary schools were expected to run double shifts until 23 requested portables arrived.
Mr. East of the Gulfport system said he was expecting that some 20 to 25 teachers and aides would not return. 鈥淲ith the decrease in student body, we鈥檙e OK,鈥 he said.
Mr. East鈥檚 worry, though, is the loss of faculty members with special expertise. Teachers of geometry and microbiology are among those on his prestorm staff of 460 teachers who are not returning, he said. But he鈥檚 not losing heart.
鈥淲e feel we will be as strong, if not stronger, than we were in the past,鈥 the superintendent said of his district.
Payroll Worries
Making payroll is also on district leaders鈥 minds, though in most cases it seems that the short-term situation is covered.
Mr. Nowakowski said the Jefferson Parish district was using a $26 million reserve fund to make the Sept. 15 and 30 payrolls.
鈥淲hat happens on Oct. 15?鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need money for salaries, and FEMA says they鈥檙e bricks-and-mortar people.鈥
He鈥檚 putting hope in a proposal state schools Superintendent Cecil J. Picard sent to Congress calling for $2.8 billion in emergency federal aid. (鈥淟a. 69传媒 Chief Seeks $2.8 Billion in K-12 Aid,鈥 Web Extra, Sept. 8, 2005.)
鈥淲e know the situations they鈥檙e in, and we鈥檙e as concerned as they are,鈥 said Meg Casper, a spokeswoman for the state schools chief. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to wait for the federal funding picture to become clearer, and once it does, the state can begin to act.鈥
Louisiana鈥檚 Plaquemines Parish district, which aims to open several schools by Oct. 17, can pay employees through the end of October.
鈥淥ur board has committed to making September and October payroll,鈥 said Carol A. Roberts, the director of secondary education and instructional technology for the district, which had 5,000 students before the storm. 鈥淎fter that, it just depends on, well, the federal government, for one thing.鈥