Gates Chili Central School District

The Gates Chili Central School District is a public school district in Rochester, New York that serves approximately 4,000 students in most of the town of Gates and a large portion of the town of Chili in Monroe County, with over 850 employees and an operating budget of $100 million (approx. $25,628 per student).[3]

Gates Chili Central School District
Location
3 Spartan Way
Rochester, New York 14624
United States
Coordinates43°09′12″N 77°42′36″W / 43.153415°N 77.709906°W / 43.153415; -77.709906 (District office)
District information
TypePublic
MottoTogether we teach and inspire excellence for all learners
GradesPre-K12 and adult education
EstablishedSeptember 1956 (1956-09)
SuperintendentChristopher J. Dailey
Asst. superintendent(s)Carol Stehm
Accreditation(s)New York State Education Department
SchoolsFour elementary schools (UPK–5)
One middle school (6–8)
One senior high school (9–12)
BudgetIncrease US $99.7 million (2015–2016)[1]
NCES District ID3611880[2]
Students and staff
StudentsIncrease 4,069 (2015–2016)[1]
TeachersIncrease 451 (2015–2016)[1]
StaffIncrease 402 (2015–2016)[1]
District mascotSpartan
ColorsBlue/White
Other information
UnionsNYSUT, Gates Chili Teachers' Association
Websitewww.gateschili.org

The Gates Chili school district opened in September 1956 as a consolidation of four Union free School districts (Thomas Edison, Warren Harding, Washington Irving and Florence Brasser), approved by voters of the four districts on December 8, 1955. The District celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2006.

The average class size is 22 students (elementary), and 21 students (middle-high school). The student–teacher ratio is 13:1 (elementary), 13:1 (middle-high school).

Christopher Dailey was selected by the Board of Education to serve as Superintendent of Schools beginning in July 2019. The former superintendent, Kimberle Ward, left the position in December 2018, with Carol Stehm serving as Interim Superintendent.[4]

Organization

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The Board of Education (BOE) consists of eight members who serve rotating three-year terms. Elections are held each May for board members and to vote on the school district's budget.

Current board members are:[5]

  • Jeffrey Pettenski, President (Term ends 2020)
  • Andrea Hinchey Unson, Vice-president (Term ends 2021)
  • Andre (Andy) Bailey (Term ends 2021)
  • Michael Bailey (Term ends 2022)
  • Raymond Banks (Term ends 2020)
  • Catherine (Katie) Coffee (Term ends 2020)
  • Kerri Keyes (Term ends 2021)
  • Francis (Frank) Muscato (Term ends 2022)
  • Dr. Christine Brown Richards (Term ends 2022)
Superintendents
Name Tenure
Cecil W. Luffman September 1956 – June 1962
William J. Kirkmire July 1962 – October 1965
William G. Hagenlocher October 1965 – January 1967 (acting)
January 1967 – 1977
William J. Dadey 1977 – February 2003
Richard A. Stein February 2003 – December 2008
Richard E. Mace January 2009 – July 2009
Mark C. Davey July 2009 – July 2013
Carol B. Stehm July 2013 – February 2014 (interim)
Kimberle A. Ward February 2014 – December 2018
Carol B. Stehm December 2018 – June 2019 (interim)
Christopher Dailey July 2019 –

Schools

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Elementary schools

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Front entrance to the Walt Disney Elementary School
  • Neil Armstrong Elementary School (UPK-5) (opened 1968), Principal – Rebecca Scott, Assistant Principal - Lindsey Georger
  • Florence Brasser Elementary School (UPK-5), Principal – Timothy Young, Assistant Principal - Kylie Smith
  • Walt Disney Elementary School (UPK-5) (opened 1967), Principal – Erin Ugine, Assistant Principal - Costadinos Tavelaris
  • Paul Road Elementary School (UPK-5) (opened 1967), Principal – Andraya Cutaia, Assistant Principal - Kim Doty

Former

  • Washington Irving Elementary School (K–5) (closed 1986 due to declining enrollment. Re-opened in 1992 and closed again in 2008)
  • Warren Harding Elementary School (closed 1982, now Northstar Christian Academy)
  • Thomas Edison Elementary School (closed 1980 due to declining enrollment, now Hope Hall)

Middle school

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  • Gates Chili Middle School (6–8) (opened 1963), Principal – Dr. Daniel Zdanowski

High school

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Beginning in 2005, the Gates Chili High School began extensive renovations, partnering with AScribe. The renovations, which concluded on September 11, 2008 at a cost of approximately $48,000,000 USD, created a larger library and guidance counseling wing, added a new Science Atrium, added a new front entrance, created more parking spaces for students and faculty, and built a new field house, housing an indoor track, fitness center, and pool. Residents of both Gates and Chili are eligible to sign up to use the new athletic facilities.[6]

Phase X Capital Project and Redistricting

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In October 2012, Gates Chili voters approved a measure to begin repairing infrastructure in all six of the schools. The estimated cost, $10.8 million, would be covered by state grants and reserve funds. Scheduled fixes include complete roof replacements at several of the schools, upgrading windows to provide energy conservation, and structural repairs to nearly every school. Repairs to the outdoor football and track stadium lighting is also budgeted into this project. The project began its work this past summer, and was scheduled to be completed by the end of Summer 2014.[7]

In 2013, the Gates Chili School District proposed a redistricting for the remaining four elementary schools – Paul Road, Florence Brasser, Neil Armstrong, and Walt Disney – beginning in September 2014. The current plans would remove 75 ESOL students from Florence Brasser and split them into two sub groups at Paul Road and Walt Disney. Redistricting would also even out enrollment levels at all four schools – Paul Road and Neil Armstrong would see their enrollment cut by roughly 75 students, leaving them with 475 kids. Walt Disney would get about 61 students to put them at 475 as well, and Florence Brasser would get 67 students to put them at 350 students. The plan is still being worked out, with a deadline of Spring 2014 for a final decision.[8]

Noted alumni

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Name Class Noted For
Lou Gramm
(real name Louis Grammatico)[9]
1968 Lead singer of the 1980s rock band "Foreigner"
Kenneth Bianchi 1970 Hillside Strangler
Th. Metzger 1974 writer, aka Leander Watts
John Fossitt[10] 2001 Keyboardist for Bruno Mars
Ernest Jackson 2005 Wide receiver for the Ottawa Redblacks
Brittanee Drexel 2010 Went missing during a spring break trip to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina in 2009.pc
Cierra Dillard 2014 Player for the Minnesota Lynx of the WNBA
Clint Hurtt 1995 Assistant coach for Seattle Seahawks of the NFL

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Facts and Figures (2015-2016), Rochester, New York: Gates Chili Central School District, 2015, p. 18, archived from the original on October 6, 2010, retrieved December 2, 2013
  2. ^ "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for Gates Chili Central School District". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  3. ^ "Facts and Figures". www.gateschili.org. Retrieved May 8, 2019.
  4. ^ pages/Meaghan-M-McDermott/316379591862539?ref=hl. "Gates Chili Superintendent Kimberle Ward on paid leave, interim leader appointed". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved May 8, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Board of Education / Board Members". www.gateschili.org. Retrieved May 8, 2019.
  6. ^ "AScribe Portfolio". Construction. Gates, New York: AScribe. 2010. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  7. ^ "Repair Information" (PDF). Construction. Gates, New York: Gates Chili Central School Districts. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 5, 2017. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  8. ^ "Redistricting". Education. Gates, New York: Gates Chili Central School Districts. 2013. Archived from the original on September 25, 2013. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  9. ^ "Lou Gramm: Gates Chili Hall of Fame". Gates Chili Central School District. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  10. ^ "Local musician playing at Super Bowl". Fox Rochester. Archived from the original on January 22, 2014. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
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