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    Omaha Public Schools is the largest school district in the state of Nebraska. This public school district serves a diverse community of more than 46,000 students at over 80 elementary and secondary schools in Omaha, Nebraska.

        Omaha Public Schools
            Key Personnel
                Elementary schools
                Middle schools
                High schools
                Alternative Schools
            Departments
                One City, One District
                Split the District
            Demographics

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    Key Personnel
      Subdistrict Board Member
        1: Penny L. Sophir
      Subdistrict Board Member
        2: Karen L. Shepard
      Subdistrict Board Member
        3: Shirley J. Tyree
      Subdistrict Board Member
        4: Nancy W. Huston
      Subdistrict Board Member
        5: Nancy Kratky
      Subdistrict Board Member
        6: F.E. "Fritz" Stanek
      Subdistrict Board Member
        7: Mark A. Martinez
      Subdistrict Board Member
        8: Mary Ellen Drickey
      Subdistrict Board Member
        9: Mona McGregor
      Subdistrict Board Member
        10: Barbara J. Dutiel
      Subdistrict Board Member
        11: Bambi Bartek

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    Elementary schools
      Adams Elementary School
      Ashland Park/Robbins Elementary School
      Bancroft Elementary School
      Beals Elementary School
      Belle Ryan Elementary School
      Belvedere Elementary School
      Benson West Elementary School
      Boyd Elementary School
      Castelar Elementary School
      Catlin Magnet Center
      Central Park Elementary School
      Chandler View Elementary School
      Columbian Elementary School
      Conestoga Magnet Center
      Crestridge Magnet Center
      Dodge Elementary School
      Druid Hill Elementary School
      Dundee Elementary School
      Edison Elementary School
      Field Club Elementary School
      Florence Elementary School
      Fontenelle Elementary School
      Franklin Elementary School
      Fullerton Magnet Center
      Gilder Elementary School
      Gomez-Heritage Elementary School
      Harrison Elementary School
      Hartman Elementary School
      Highland Elementary School
      Indian Hill Elementary School
      Jackson Elementary School
      Jefferson Elementary School
      Joslyn Elementary School
      Kellom Elementary School
      Kennedy Elementary School
      King Elementary School
      King Science and Technology Magnet Center
      Liberty Elementary School
      Lord Elementary School
      Lothrop Magnet Center
      Marrs Magnet Middle School
      Masters Elementary School
      Miller Park Elementary School
      Minne Lusa Elementary School
      Mount View Elementary School
      Oak Valley Elementary School
      Pawnee Elementary School
      Picotte Elementary School
      Pinewood Elementary School
      Ponca Elementary School
      Prairie Wind Elementary School
      Rose Hill Elementary School
      Saratoga Elementary School
      Sherman Elementary School
      Skinner Magnet Center
      Spring Lake Magnet Center
      Springville Elementary School
      Standing Bear Elementary School
      Sunny Slope Elementary School
      Wakonda Elementary School
      Walnut Hill Elementary School
      Washington Elementary School
      Western Hills Magnet Center
      Yates Alternative School

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    Middle schools
      Bryan Middle School
      Buffett Magnet Middle School
      King Science and Technology Magnet Center
      Lewis & Clark Middle School
      Marrs Magnet Middle School
      Monroe Middle School
      Morton Middle School
      Nathan Hale Middle School
      Norris Middle School

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    High schools

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    Alternative Schools
      Blackburn Alternative High School
      Parrish Alternative School
      Wilson Alternative Middle School
      Yates Alternative School

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    Departments
      Employment Opportunities
      AAC/Resource/OI
      Accounting and Finance
      Adult Education
      America Reads Tutoring Program
      Application Center
      Art
      Banneker 2000: CEMS
      Behavior Disorder
      Budget Office
      Business Marketing/Information Technology
      Career and Technical Education
      Career Assessment Center/Work Keys
      Career Planning and Job Placement
      Compensation and Benefits
      Distribution Center
      Due Process Hearing Office
      Early Childhood Special Education
      Early Development Network
      Educational Research Center
      Employess Assistance Program
      English/Language Arts
      ESL
      EXCELS PLUS
      Family and Consumer Sciences
      Gifted and Talented
      Guidance and Counseling
      Health Services
      Help Desk
      Homebound
      Industrial Technology
      Information Management Services
      International Languages
      Job Hotline
      KIOS-FM Radio/Television Production
      Library Services
      Links to Success
      Mathematics
      Media Technology Center
      Mentally Handicapped
      Music
      Native American Indian Education
      Nutrition Services
      Occupational and Physical Therapy
      Office of Accountability and Special Projects
      Office of the Board of Education
      Omaha Schools Foundation
      Physical Education
      Printing and Publications Services
      Psychological Services
      Public Information Services
      Purchasing
      Reading Services
      Research
      Retirement Office
      School Safety/Climate
      Science
      Social Studies
      Special Education
      Special Education Placement
      Speech-Language
      Staff Development
      Student Information Services
      Student Services Placement
      Student/Community Relations
      SubFinder
      Substitute Teacher Office
      TDD
      User Support
      Visually Impaired
      Work Experience Program

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    One City, One District
    On June 6, 2005, the Omaha Public Schools (OPS) Board and Superintendent John Mackiel announced their intention to annex 25 schools within Omaha city limits to OPS. They are currently part of the Elkhorn Public Schools, Millard Public Schools and Ralston Public Schools districts. This announcement, based on three Nebraska statutes enacted in 1891 and 1947, is known as the One City, One School District plan.

    This issue is highly controversial in Omaha. Supporters of the plan claim that a single school district is necessary to promote a cohesive Omaha community, ensure academic equity in all Omaha schools and prevent OPS from becoming locked in to a declining property tax base. Opponents contend that Omaha-area residents should be able to choose from a number of school districts, that the schools would become less efficient in one large school district, and that the initiative is no more than a power and money grab by OPS. Discussions among the school districts have been unproductive; the issue figured prominently in the 2006 session of the Nebraska state legislature.

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    Split the District
    The Nebraska legislature passed a bill (LB 1024) on April 13, 2006, that addresses the One City, One School District issues. The governor of Nebraska signed it later that day. It requires each metropolitan class city to have a "learning community" that consists of all of the school districts in the county where the city is located and any county that shares a border with the city. The learning community will be comprised of voting representatives from each school district and will also include the superintendents of the districts as non-voting members. A learning community will be charged with helping to distribute property tax revenue more evenly throughout the school districts in its area.

    In general, a learning community leaves the boundaries of school districts untouched. However, LB 1024 also calls for OPS to be broken into three separate school districts. The exact boundaries for three new Omaha school districts are to be chosen by the Omaha learning community. Their choices are limited by requirements of LB 1024 that each new district consist of contiguous high school attendance areas and include either two or three of the seven existing high schools. That allows about 20 ways to group the seven schools, depending on which adjacent high school attendance areas are grouped with the geographically most central area.

    The three-district plan for OPS was proposed in amendment AM3142, introduced on the day the legislature first took up LB 1024. The suburban school districts reluctantly supported the three-district plan, seeing it as the most favorable to them of the bills proposed. The OPS leadership vehemently opposed the plan. AM3142 was approved on the day it was introduced by a counted vote of 33 to 6 with 10 senators not voting. Five days later a motion to reconsider AM3142 failed in a roll-call vote of 9 to 31 with 9 senators not voting. The roll call showed legislators from Omaha split six in favor of the three-district plan (Sens. Brashear, Brown, Chambers, Jensen, Pahls and Redfield) and five opposed (Sens. Bourne, Friend, Howard, Kruse and Synowiecki).

    It is suspected that OPS may file a suit challenging the new law. On May 16, 2006, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed a suit against the governor and other Nebraska state officials, charging that LB 1024 "intentionally furthers racial segregation." The NAACP lawsuit argues that because Omaha has racially segregated residential patterns, subdivided school districts will also be racially segregated, contrary to United States law.

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    Demographics





    The City of Omaha has grown in several steps, annexing neighboring areas. Under long established Nebraska law it is limited to the boundaries of Douglas County. According to April, 2006, information published by Associated Press, the current Omaha public school district has approximately 45,000 students classified as 46 percent white, 31 percent black, 20 percent Hispanic, and 3 percent Asian or American Indian. News reports indicate that division of the city of Omaha into three new school districts, as ordered in April, 2006, by the Nebraska legislature and including current Elkhorn, Millard and Ralston public schools, is often expected to result in black students concentrated in a northern district, white students in a southern and western district, and non-English speaking students in a central district. However, the law does not mandate such a result. Within its requirements, new districts may be drawn in several different ways.

     
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