
Bishop Galante & Co. must really not like Salem County. The closure rate there is simply unbelievable. When all is said and done there will be almost nothing left of the Catholic Church in the entire county. In this article, we read that Bishop Guilfoyle School in Carneys Point will close in June. Parents who want to send their kids to Catholic school will have to travel to Gloucester County, Cumberland County, or go over the bridge to Delaware, but as we all know, school and church closures are occurring all around us at an unprecedented rate, so enrolling a child in a Catholic school anywhere holds no guarantees. Parents who choose to enroll their child in a nearby regional Catholic school will have a lot of hard thinking to do as to how much "change" they are willing to put their children through. Let's face it, most of these kids are likely to end up in public school, not another Catholic school.
Lingering questions about Catholic school closures & Catholic education:
- What has the Diocese done to ensure proper financial management of these schools?
- What has the Diocese done to help support and assign good administrators to these schools?
- What has the Diocese done to help provide quality, uncompromising, Catholic education and challenging curricula?
- What has the Diocese done to encourage the influx of teaching religious orders to the Diocese? Why has the Diocese turned away orders that have offered to come here?
- What has the Diocese done to help re-think making Catholic education truly affordable to parents? (Even in the past sixteen years or so, the tuition at my Catholic high school has roughly tripled.)
- How has the Diocese provided support to the new generation of Catholic home educators, those who have been either priced out of Catholic education and dissatisfied with the quality of some Catholic schools?
- Has the Diocese actually spoken to families and teachers at these schools or has it just decided to abandon them, sight unseen?
Read article by clicking
HERE.
Snip:
By Phil Dunn, pdunn@sjnewsco.com
CARNEYS POINT TWP. --
Bishop Guilfoyle Regional Catholic School here will close its doors at
the end of this school year, bringing an end to Catholic school
education in Salem County.
The imminent closure was announced to parents of students via an e-mail from the Georgetown Road school's principal.
The school, operated by the Diocese of Camden, joins a growing list of Catholic schools in South Jersey to be shuttered.
"Declining
enrollment in our schools, rising deficits and heavy burdens on the
sponsoring parishes," have been cited as reasons Bishop Guilfoyle will
close, according to the letter parents received.
The letter says
the population of the area the school serves has declined 30 percent
over the past 50 years, a situation that "has contributed to a marked
decline in enrollment from our peak of 373 students in 2001-2002 to
just 111 this year."
The school teaches students from pre-kindergarden through eighth grade.
Diane
Sparks, a resident of Pennsville, has two girls enrolled at Bishop
Guilfoyle. She has also been a marketing volunteer for the past five
years at the school.
"We've talked to several families that came
to the open house and they were interested in Bishop Guilfoyle," said
Sparks. "Other families that had left last year were also considering
coming back to enroll their children."
Catholic schools have
long been favored by Catholic families and non-Catholics who believed
the education their children would receive would be superior to public
schools. But with the closing of the schools parents are now forced to
return their children to the public school system or travel a longer
distances for Catholic schooling.
"That is the most upsetting
thing," said Sparks on Wednesday. "I don't want to bus my child 50
minutes away to a Catholic school in Gloucester County. It's just not
reasonable."
This severe under-enrollment has resulted in a
reduction of tuition income, thereby placing upward pressure on tuition
rates, which, in turn, has made it difficult to increase enrollment,
especially during difficult economic times.
This has resulted in rising deficits, which will be nearly $400,000 this year, the Diocese says.
Right
now at Bishop Guilfoyle parents are paying tuition rates of $3,600 for
the first child enrolled and $2,800 for the second child, said Sparks.
If
parents choose to transfer their children to another Catholic school,
the Diocese of Camden will be offering $1,000 vouchers to help reduce
tuition costs at a new school.
"We are exploring the possibility
of having the tuition reimbursement honored at area Catholic schools
outside of the Camden Diocese as well," said Andrew Walton, spokesman
for the Diocese.
Jennifer Jones, whose daughter is enrolled at
Bishop Guilfoyle feels the Diocese did not look deep enough for a
solution to declining enrollment.
"I'm devastated and I'm not
sure they did everything they could to keep Catholic education in Salem
County," said Jones who serves as executive director of the Salem
County Chamber of Commerce. "It seems to me there are a number of
smaller buildings in the county that could of been optioned to keep the
school open."
Walton directed those parents who wish to voice their concern about the closing to the school administration.
"I
think that if parents have a particular concern they should certainly
surface those concerns to the leadership of the school," said Walton.
"If the school administration and sponsoring parishes believe the
bishop doesn't have the information he needs, they will forward it to
the Diocese for review."
As for the school's staff, the letter
parents received said the Diocese would help place as many teachers
from Bishop Guilfoyle as possible in other Catholic schools and for
those it can't, it would offer "an assistance package" during their
transition to other employment.
The fate of the building itself is unclear.
Some parent were taken aback by the sudden decision to close the doors of the last Catholic school in Salem County.
"Most
of the talk going on at board meetings was the consolidation of Bishop
Guilfoyle and Guardian Angels (Catholic school) in Paulsboro," said
Bishop Guilfoyle PTA President Tom Hassler. "So it caught me off guard."
Hassler said they were looking to consolidate the school under a new name and use the Bishop Guilfoyle location.
Those
not wanted to travel to Gloucester or Cumberland County have been
looking to schools in the Wilmington Diocese in neighboring Delaware.
"From
what I heard, schools in New Castle and Wilmington will apparently
welcome us with open arms," said Hassler. "They are willing to work
with us to provide some type of transportation, too."
Hassler also believes the Wilmington Diocese has a more educational sound system in place.
"The Wilmington Diocese is pro education," said Hassler. "Wilmington gets the school up and running before they add a church."
Bishop
Guilfoyle's closing is the second major blow to Catholic education in
the county in the past decade. It's been about 10 years since the
Diocese closed St. James High School (which was located in the building
now used by Bishop Guilfoyle) and St. Mary Regional School in Salem and
St. James Elementary School in Penns Grove.
The students from
the two elementary schools, along with another Catholic elementary
school in Gloucester County, were transferred to Bishop Guilfoyle.
The
news of the school's closing comes at the same time the Diocese of
Camden is consolidating neighborhood parishes in Salem County. That
action has left many Catholics unhappy.
The Diocese of Camden, Hassler said, has written off Salem County.
"They are going to lose a whole new generation of Catholics," said Hassler. "It's spiraling down more than it already was."