|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() Streaming Radio |
Real Estate |
Automotive |
Employment |
|
Classifieds |
|
Media Kit |
Forms |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
Pomp and (dire) circumstance
On Friday night, the eighth-grade class of 2006 was the last to receive their diplomas from Holy Trinity School, which will be shut down at the end of this school year. "It is just sad," said Sister RoseAnn Fernandez in an interview last week. She has been principal of the school on Exchange Place for the past eight years. "Everyone here is sad," she said. "The students are having mixed emotions. It's the seventh-graders who are really anxious. They are all excited about summer, but they were hoping they could have completed their education here. Everyone will have to be starting at a new school next year."
"There will be an empty nest in Long Branch," Fernandez said. "This is the only Catholic school in the area that served a community of such a diverse population. "[Holy Trinity] is the most family-oriented school I know," she continued. "It is such a close-knit, loving and caring community." Holy Trinity has committed to providing $1,000 scholarships to each of the current students at the school to attend any of the following schools: Our Lady of Mount Caramel, Asbury Park; Pope John XXIII Regional School, Ocean Township; and St. Jerome, West Long Branch.
An additional five students will be attending other Catholic schools, and the remaining students are planning either to attend public school or are still undecided, Fernandez said. But Fernandez said the school's 10 teachers, secretaries, cafeteria aide and maintenance workers are not as fortunate. "So far only three teachers have gotten jobs at other schools," Fernandez said. "One of our teachers will be teaching at St. James in Red Bank, and two of our teachers will be going over to St. Joseph's in Toms River." As for Fernandez, she has been transferred to Blessed Sacrament School in Paterson, where she will be principal. Holy Trinity School was one of the schools originally earmarked for closure or consolidation by the diocese-commissioned Strategic Planning Process that concluded its Monmouth County phase in November.
When a donation was pledged in late January, the announcement was made that Holy Trinity would remain open for the next school year, during which time "members of the community will develop and implement a plan to provide for the [school's] long-term viability," according to a statement by the diocese on Feb. 2. But a disappointing and unexpected twist of fate left Holy Trinity once again searching for another miracle to keep the school's doors open. School families were advised in a letter in March and again on May 1 that additional students were needed to keep the school's doors open. The May 1 letter set a May 5 deadline for an additional 45 students to register, which would have brought enrollment close to 115 students, according to the press release.
A decision was finalized by the diocese on May 5 to close the school at the end of this school year. "This is a school where the children feel comfortable in the small environment," Fernandez said. "I know all of my students' names and all of their families." Fernandez added that the school building will continue to be used by the parish for religious education classes and other meetings.
|
|
||||||||||||||||