The Atlanta school board’s unanimous decision late Wednesday to close, repurpose and build additions to more than a dozen schools in the next few years is part of a long-range plan to reshape the district to improve student outcomes. Some parents and community leaders feel the decision to close some schools is short-sighted and the district should focus on providing more resources to those schools.

Why is this happening?

APS officials say the district has capacity for about 70,000 students but currently enrolls roughly 50,000 students. Atlanta’s enrollment has declined by more than 2,000 students over the last decade. The underenrollment in some schools is one of many issues that prevent the district from providing high-quality educational programs, officials say, which it hopes to address as part of its APS Forward 2040 plan. Some of the plans depend on whether Atlanta voters extend a penny sales tax to help pay for school renovations.

How many schools are impacted?

Sixteen school buildings will be repurposed. That means some schools will close, others will merge, and one middle school will be converted to an elementary school. Community members raised concerns this week that closed school buildings could become blighted properties.

Atlanta Superintendent Bryan Johnson said the district will make use of empty buildings so that doesn’t happen.

Superintendent Bryan Johnson (right) interacts with an 11-year-old student, Ronnie Burks, at the Sylvan Hills Middle School’s first day of class in Atlanta on Thursday, Aug. 1, 2024.  (Ziyu Julian Zhu/AJC)

Credit: Ziyu Julian Zhu/AJC

icon to expand image

Credit: Ziyu Julian Zhu/AJC

“Historically ... we may not have done as good a job as we should have done with making sure that facilities can be maximized for the community,” he said. “We will 100% look at, ‘What can we do in these cases?’”

What are the objections?

Parents and community members say the schools are the heart of the community and are worried about issues such as how students will get to and from school. Some communities rely on schools to provide critical resources, such as meals, health care and social services. Critics fear the closures will lower property values in those communities and drive more students to charter schools and homeschooling.

Nathaniel Dyer puts his thumbs down during an Atlanta School Board meeting in Atlanta on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. APS held its final vote on school consolidation plans, approving several school closures. (Abbey Cutrer/AJC)

Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com

icon to expand image

Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com

When will the changes take place?

The closures and additions would begin at the 2027-28 school year.

What happens to the students at these schools?

The students will be zoned to attend other nearby schools in the district.

What happens next?

The board needs to approve new attendance zones next year for the district, which is necessary to determine which schools students will attend once the closures are done. The district plans to have more community meetings and create task force subcommittees for the repurposing and other categories.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Uta Thomas picks up her son, Jax, during a public hearing in Atlanta on Wednesday, November 5, 2025. She implored the school board not to close Dunbar Elementary. 
"You would centralize education to decentralized families," she said. "You would break apart a community hub." (Abbey Cutrer / AJC)

Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com

Featured

Ja’Quon Stembridge, shown here in July at the Henry County Republican Party monthly meeting, recently stepped from his position with the Georgia GOP. (Jenni Girtman for the AJC)

Credit: Jenni Girtman