A minority of speakers at the May 26 public hearing told the Pittsburgh Public Schools board that a careful consolidation could free district resources for instruction and student services.
"Maintaining half-empty facilities costs millions of dollars that could instead support academics, staffing, student services, and opportunities for children across the district," said Holly Williams. Supporters argued that declining enrollment and widely underutilized buildings make difficult choices unavoidable unless the district finds new revenue sources.
At the same time, critics said the board and administration had not provided the concrete evidence needed to justify large-scale closures. Pam Harbin, speaking for community organizers, said the resolution posted with the agenda lacked measurable student-outcome benchmarks and warned that the implementation updates proposed by the district were insufficient to provide real accountability. "If this passes tomorrow, Dr. Walters will report what he did, not whether students benefited," Harbin said.
Proponents urged the board to treat implementation as a multi-year journey with clear milestones; opponents asked instead for independent financial review, detailed transportation and staffing plans, and written guarantees that special-education slots and community-school wraparound services would carry to receiving campuses.
The hearing closed without a vote; the board scheduled the contested agenda item for action at a subsequent meeting.