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The Silicon Valley Voice

Power To Your Voice

NVHS: 60-Year Journey to Permanent Home (Part 2 – Status Quo for Neighbors, Sports Clubs or Equity for District Students)

Carolyn Schuk

The effort to find a campus for New Valley High School is not a one new for SCUSD, it's just one that's getting attention now.

Since 2017, Santa Clara Unified School District (SCUSD) has intended to build a new school for New Valley High School, and in 2024, the board approved a plan to move the school to a renovated Wilson Educational Options Campus. But despite years of very public discussion and planning, opponents of the Wilson plan continue to attack the plan.

Part 1 reviews the history of the plan to move New Valley High School to the Wilson Educational Options Campus.

The principal objection to moving New Valley to the Wilson Educational Options Campus isn’t about logistics or whether the campus can provide what the school needs. Instead, the argument is one about neighborhood ambiance and the availability of school fields for non-SCUSD groups.

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Wilson is already home to district Adult Education, Wilson Pre-School, Wilson High School self-study program, Family-Child Education, Independence Network and Student Services, including the SCUSD Enrollment Center and the Family Resource Center. These programs bring people to the campus throughout the day and evening. The proposed plan will use about one-third of the remaining open space on the campus.

Earlier this year, a group calling itself “Save Our Green Space – Stop New Valley” started a petition. They have been vocal at the townhalls, and, at the most recent meeting about New Valley in November. Some even disrupted the meeting by interrupting speakers and catcalling.

Opposition comes from neighbors and non-SCUSD groups complaining that New Valley would bring more traffic to Benton Street, harm the environment and interfere with Little Leagues and cricket clubs that use the fields. All of which amounts to “potentially jeopardizing our community’s well-being and serenity,” says the group’s website.

“The presence of a high school so close to a residential area brings forth immense challenges … Benton Street, already bustling with transit, will likely become a hub of morning and afternoon vehicular activity,” with the result that “incessant noise from school activities will pose a significant disruption to our daily lives.”

Originally a middle school, Wilson School has been on that site since 1955, adding a new administration building in 1982.

Commenters on the site are more pointed. “Raphael” writes: “We have enough class room [sic] there should be a [sic] open field and not boxes.” Another commenter, “Janelle,” summarizes their opposition as, “This is ridiculous given the amount that we pay in taxes just to live in our beautiful city.”

One commenter, “Caroline, Oakland,” likely damaged opponents’ cause more than helped it with her comment: “There are already other high schools in Santa Clara. We don’t need to invest $125 million in an alternative school. That money would be better spent on kids that want to be in school and have not been expelled from the existing options!”

The New Valley budget is $62 million, none of its students have been expelled from other schools, and at 60, it is an SCUSD program of long standing.

It’s About Equity

It is likely that no other students in SCUSD are sitting in classrooms that haven’t been renovated or significantly improved in half a century.

“It’s not sexy to spend money on the disenfranchised,” said then-Board President Vickie Fairchild at the  Oct. 24. 2024 school board meeting. “We have some of our most needy students in the horrible facilities, and we have parents that scream about portables [on school campuses] all the time. The whole [New Valley] campus is portables.”

While building a new high school campus was “fiscally irresponsible,” said SCUSD Trustee Michele Ryan at the same meeting. “It doesn’t give a solution to our students who are continuing to be in a campus that they shouldn’t have been in for years.

“I challenge anyone to go to the New Valley campus and think that that’s an acceptable solution for our students, our students who are at greatest need,” Ryan continued. “I would like this done next year and have them moved into a facility that supports them. What are we telling students to have them in that campus year after year after year and not serve them?” 

Recent New Valley graduate Jessica Buckley spoke on New Valley’s students’ “dire need” for a better campus.

“I struggled with my academics, as well as many others in 2020, so much so that I was needing to recover more than an entire year’s worth of credits,” she said. “At that point, I had no intention of completing high school. All that changed when I entered New Valley’s program.”

Buckley went on to detail the poor state of the campus: damaged ceilings, insufficient bathrooms, no cafeteria, limited space for school activities.

She concluded, “I ask you to consider the urgent needs of this district’s most vulnerable students while making this decision.”

Speakers at the 2024 meeting representing other programs on the Wilson site, while voicing concerns about how the proposal would work and how it might affect other programs, supported New Valley’s need for proper facilities. 

“My whole goal in attending today was to advocate for the [community] garden [at Wilson],” said Julie Garrett, “and I still hold that goal, but I am struck by the complexities of the problem that you’re trying to solve. I think there’s a lot of synergy that could be had here … Texting with other gardeners … [we said] we really want to get involved in … outreach to these incredible kids.”

Carolyn Schuk can be reached at carolyn@santaclaraweekly.com.

Related Posts:
Santa Clara Unified: New Valley High School Finds New Home
New Valley and Wilson Seniors Win Kiwanis Club Turnaround Scholarships

Thomas Wu, also wrote the following piece in the Wilcox Scribe: https://scribewilcox.com/5382/uncategorized/new-valley-high-school-relocation-an-scusd-equity-issue/.

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7 comments

7 thoughts on “NVHS: 60-Year Journey to Permanent Home (Part 2 – Status Quo for Neighbors, Sports Clubs or Equity for District Students)”

  1. 1) You mentioned little leagues and cricket, but Wilson fields are also used by soccer (the largest sports user group in the city!), flag football, etc.

    2) The fields are funded by the public – public civic centers. So the public does have a right to access. They pay 3x btw to use the fields, yes THREE – through taxes, bonds, property taxes, sports registration fees that are used to pay climbing field usage fees!

    3) Why do we keep building more when enrollment keeps declining? Why are we not better utilizing and updating spaces we have? (ahem, Laurelwood)

    4) This is an extremely important FACT: a large majority of the sports groups that want to use the green space they pay for ARE SCUSD students. You refer to the groups and non SCUSD groups. While a soccer team might not be part of a local school, the kids that play on those are! Elementary schools don’t have sports teams for these kids. Middle school is hit or miss. Some schools only have some teams. e.g. one soccer team for 3 grades. That helps all of 20 kids. What about the 60-70 other kids that try out and there’s no team for them to play on? The same is true for HS. Not all kids make the teams. What about them? Where do you think the fantastic athletes that DO play for the schools come from? They have to play through other organizations, who are developing them. But those ARE SCUSD students! The same kids you brag about winning trophies and championships. It was a huge deal last year when the SCHS Varsity baseball team had history making success. Guess where ALL those kids learned baseball? The local little leagues.

    Green space becoming more and more of an extremely limited resource in our city. We need to protect it at all costs.

    The school district should be ashamed of themselves for not being better partners with these groups.

    Reply
  2. We have been guaranteed by SCUSD staff that this 200 student alternative school will not change our quiet safe community. I will be sure to address anything that changes that with the principal and district staff! The school and district phone numbers are available online so be sure to contact them if/when you see anything that is a problem to this community.

    Reply
    • Yes please call and complain when “those students” infiltrate your neighborhood.
      408-423-2000.
      GOD forbid a public school district should replace portables with a permanent classroom building.
      What year did you purchase your home? Was it after Wilson was a built school? Tell me Mrs. C, what are you scared of?? Really?

      Reply
    • Yes please call and complain when “those students” infiltrate your neighborhood.
      408-423-2000.
      GOD forbid a public school district should in replace portables with a permanent classroom building.
      What year did you purchase your home? Was it after Wilson was a built school? Tell me Mrs. C, what are you scared of?? Really?

      Reply
  3. School District property is not a public park. They don’t owe the community anything other than providing education to Kinder to 12th grade. Show me a law where the property is a public park, dog park, soccer field, baseball field, or cricket field. Those are all good things I agree. But the lack of green space is not a school district problem. It’s a City of Santa Clara problem. Talk to Mayor Gilmor.

    Reply

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