Help Save Blackshear Elementary School from Closure


Help Save Blackshear Elementary School from Closure
The Issue
Austin ISD has proposed:
- Closing the current Blackshear Elementary campus
- Completing new construction at Oak Springs Elementary
- Moving the consolidated Blackshear school to the Oak Springs campus once construction is completed
While this proposal is often described as a “campus move” or a “modernization decision,” the outcome is the same: Blackshear Elementary as a place, a neighborhood anchor, and a historic campus would be permanently closed.
What We’re Asking For
We call on Austin ISD trustees and district leadership to:
- Pause any decision that would close or relocate Blackshear Elementary
- Commit to a formal vote by the AISD Board of Trustees on any school closure or campus relocation
We are not opposed to investment, modernization, or meeting the needs of Oak Springs students. We are opposed to a process that sacrifices transparency, trust and the democratic process.
Why?
A Campus Move is Actually a Campus Closure
Blackshear cannot be separated from its location. Moving the school off its historic campus: severs long-standing community partnerships and permanently removes a site rich in cultural, educational, and historical significance.
Calling this a “campus move” does not change the reality that this is a closure of Blackshear.
The Board of Trustees voted to close Oak Springs, not Blackshear.
The Process Bypasses Democratic Accountability
Despite repeated references to the importance of process and community engagement, this decision is being advanced without a formal vote by the AISD Board of Trustees.
School closures are among the most consequential actions a district can take. Families deserve to see their elected representatives go on record and be accountable to the community they serve.
The Board of Trustees formally voted to close Oak Springs. The Board of Trustees also formally voted for Oak Springs to “restart” and the vote did not pass.
Multiple Campus Moves Create Unnecessary Disruption
The 2026–2027 school year already represents a major transition for students and families. This will be the first year Oak Springs students attend school on the Blackshear campus, requiring new routines, relationships, and expectations for children and caregivers alike.
The current proposal would require a second campus move the very next year, in 2027–2028. Families who have just established stability would be asked to uproot again—while students and educators are simultaneously expected to implement a demanding Turnaround Plan.
Research and lived experience both tell us that stability matters, especially for young learners. Asking students to endure repeated disruptions during a critical period of academic intervention puts their success at risk and undermines the very goals the district says it is trying to achieve.
Blackshear's Success is Tied to Its Location
Blackshear has worked hard—alongside its principal, teachers, and families—to become and remain a passing school. Blackshear’s success is not accidental. It is supported by:
- Proximity to higher education institutions like Huston-Tillotson University and the University of Texas
- Proximity to third places like the Carver Library
- Proximity to Kealing Middle School
These relationships are place-based. They cannot simply be moved

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The Issue
Austin ISD has proposed:
- Closing the current Blackshear Elementary campus
- Completing new construction at Oak Springs Elementary
- Moving the consolidated Blackshear school to the Oak Springs campus once construction is completed
While this proposal is often described as a “campus move” or a “modernization decision,” the outcome is the same: Blackshear Elementary as a place, a neighborhood anchor, and a historic campus would be permanently closed.
What We’re Asking For
We call on Austin ISD trustees and district leadership to:
- Pause any decision that would close or relocate Blackshear Elementary
- Commit to a formal vote by the AISD Board of Trustees on any school closure or campus relocation
We are not opposed to investment, modernization, or meeting the needs of Oak Springs students. We are opposed to a process that sacrifices transparency, trust and the democratic process.
Why?
A Campus Move is Actually a Campus Closure
Blackshear cannot be separated from its location. Moving the school off its historic campus: severs long-standing community partnerships and permanently removes a site rich in cultural, educational, and historical significance.
Calling this a “campus move” does not change the reality that this is a closure of Blackshear.
The Board of Trustees voted to close Oak Springs, not Blackshear.
The Process Bypasses Democratic Accountability
Despite repeated references to the importance of process and community engagement, this decision is being advanced without a formal vote by the AISD Board of Trustees.
School closures are among the most consequential actions a district can take. Families deserve to see their elected representatives go on record and be accountable to the community they serve.
The Board of Trustees formally voted to close Oak Springs. The Board of Trustees also formally voted for Oak Springs to “restart” and the vote did not pass.
Multiple Campus Moves Create Unnecessary Disruption
The 2026–2027 school year already represents a major transition for students and families. This will be the first year Oak Springs students attend school on the Blackshear campus, requiring new routines, relationships, and expectations for children and caregivers alike.
The current proposal would require a second campus move the very next year, in 2027–2028. Families who have just established stability would be asked to uproot again—while students and educators are simultaneously expected to implement a demanding Turnaround Plan.
Research and lived experience both tell us that stability matters, especially for young learners. Asking students to endure repeated disruptions during a critical period of academic intervention puts their success at risk and undermines the very goals the district says it is trying to achieve.
Blackshear's Success is Tied to Its Location
Blackshear has worked hard—alongside its principal, teachers, and families—to become and remain a passing school. Blackshear’s success is not accidental. It is supported by:
- Proximity to higher education institutions like Huston-Tillotson University and the University of Texas
- Proximity to third places like the Carver Library
- Proximity to Kealing Middle School
These relationships are place-based. They cannot simply be moved

723
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Petition created on February 8, 2026