ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. — Orange County Public Schools is considering closing more than a half dozen campuses due to financial constraints and a significant decline in enrollment.
This year, OCPS is estimating a $41 million funding deficit. The school district reports that enrollment has decreased by 8,000 students over the last three years. School board members acknowledged that many students are going to private schools, charter schools, or are being home-schooled.
School board members haven’t officially decided if they’ll close the schools. The board is set to meet next week to discuss during a work session.
Channel 9 obtained a list of the schools that could be closed or consolidated: Union Park Middle School, Bonneville Elementary School, Chickasaw Elementary School, Eccleston Elementary School, Meadow Woods Elementary, McCoy Elementary, and Orlo Vista Elementary.
This could be a major disruption for thousands of families along with the teachers and other employees that work at these schools.
School board members say they don’t want to close schools, but their hands are tied.
“I love the school. I want to save all of OCPS. But think of Michael McCoy Elementary. We have a great community,” said one woman speaking during public comment.
Teachers and parents from McCoy Elementary are asking the Orange County School Board not to close their school. In the last five days, they’ve collected more than a thousand signatures and are counting on a Change.org petition.
“We don’t want to close schools, we don’t want to consolidate schools,” said School Board Chair Teresa Jacobs.
Orange County Public School data shows the enrollment at these seven schools dropping, in some cases by hundreds of students, over the last decade.
Bonneville Elementary’s enrollment has dropped by nearly 230 students since 2015. Eccleston Elementary’s enrollment decreased by 328 students, nearly halving their enrollment.
Almost all seven schools are at half or less of their capacity. McCoy Elementary’s capacity is listed at 834, but their enrollment was at just shy of 460 last year. Bonneville Elementary can hold nearly 940 students but only had 375 students last school year.
“When the school has half its student enrollment, the cost of operating that school doesn’t drop by 50 percent,” Jacobs said.
“When schools are 30, 40, 50 percent underenrolled, we no longer have the dollars to make up that deficit,” said Superintendent Vazquez.
Superintendent Vazquez says it costs the school district $1 million dollars to run an elementary school before a student even walks in.
The District estimates a conservative loss of $41 million in funding this year, where the Superintendent says they have to consider class sizes, personnel and cutting back services.
“Every child deserves a high-quality education and we can no longer afford to dilute resources,” said board member Angie Gallo.
Board member Alicia Farrant said this isn’t just about closing schools. She says board members are considering the impacts this will have on the community and the lives of students, parents, teachers and custodians.
School board members are set to meet next week for a work session.
If the schools are closed, they would shut at the end of the current school year with their students assigned to new schools for the 2026-27 school year.
The district is deciding this as “schools of hope” charter operators have asked to move into under-enrolled campuses, and a new state law lets them do that for free. OCPS got more than 50 requests from charter operators this year.
The superintendent says the law and the number of notices is pushing the District to make a decision on the schools soon.
Because if OCPS doesn’t make a plan for those half-empty schools, a charter company could step in and claim the space.
Click here to download our free news, weather and smart TV apps. And click here to stream Channel 9 Eyewitness News live.
©2025 Cox Media Group





