Site chosen for new Whitehorse Elementary School building - Action News
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Site chosen for new Whitehorse Elementary School building

The Yukon government has announced the site wherethe newcole Whitehorse Elementary School will be builtin the city's Takhini neighbourhood.

New facility in Takhini neighbourhood will replace 74-year-old school building downtown

Looking out from home plate at a softball field.
Softball fields on Whitehorse's Takhini Educational Land Reserve will be replaced with the new Whitehorse Elementary School building, the territorial government announced on Tuesday. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

The Yukon government has chosenthe site wherethe newcole Whitehorse Elementary School will be builtin the city's Takhini neighbourhood.

The new facility which will replace the aging Whitehorse Elementary School building that's downtown will goon the northwest corner of the TakhiniEducational Land Reserve, near Range Road and University Drive. There are softball fields on thatsite now.

The new Whitehorse Elementary, a kindergarten-to-Grade 7 French immersion school, will beadjacent to Takhini Elementary School, and the territorial government says the two schools will share a multi-use sports field.

Education Minister Jeanie McLean said at a news conference on Tuesdaythe site was selected "because it best meets the need of both the school and the surrounding community."

She cited the shared sports field, traffic management and "minimal disruption to the existing operations of neighbouring schools" as some of the main benefits of the chosen site.

Two men and a woman sit behind a table at microphones.
Community Services Minister Richard Mostyn, left, Public Works Minister Nils Clarke, centre, and Education Minister Jeanie McLean at a news conference in Whitehorse on Tuesday, announcing the location for the new school. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

The territorial government announced plans for anew Whitehorse Elementary School two years ago, and said it would be built in Takhini. Tuesday's announcement specifies the exact location within the 16-acre education reserve there.

The existing Whitehorse Elementary was built in 1950 and the government has said it topsthe list of several schools in the territory due for major renovations or replacement. The territory said in 2022 that renovating the existing Whitehorse Elementary would be about 1.4 times more expensive than building a new one.

McLean said Tuesday that her Liberal government "inherited a deficit" when it came to upgrading or building schools.

"We recognize that we have a lot of work to do to bring all of our schools up to the standards that we want to have for all of our children in the Yukon," McLean said on Tuesday.

"We are absolutely in a state of catching up to where it should be."

There is no timeline yet for when construction might begin on the new Whitehorse Elementary, or when it might open.Public Works Minister Nils Clarke said in 2022 that work would begin afterconstruction was complete on the new Whistle Bend Elementary School, which happened earlier this year.

The Whistle Bend school cost $42.8 million. Clarke said in 2022 that the new Whitehorse Elementary would likely have a similar price tag, depending on inflation or other factors.

Looking out at a softball field.
Construction of the new school will eliminate two softball fields currently used by Softball Yukon. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

The new school will eliminate two softball fields currently used bySoftball Yukon. The government said in a news release thatit's working with the organization to "identify solutions that will enable the organization to continue offering valuable sports opportunities to its nearly 2,000 members."

Gov't committed to a downtown school, minister says

The announcement two years ago about demolishing the aging Whitehorse Elementary School downtown and building a new one elsewhere proved controversial. Parents, opposition politiciansand the cityall spoke out, saying the move would leave the city with no public elementary school in the downtown area.

NDP MLA Lane Tredger has said having a downtown school is about making the downtown "livable for everyone."

"That includes children. And that means a school," Tredger said earlier this year.

A red school building beside a city street.
The existing cole Whitehorse Elementary School building in downtown Whitehorse is 74 years old. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

Whitehorse city council passed a motion about it lastspring. The motiondidnot specifically mention keeping the existing cole Whitehorse Elementary School open, and instead urgedthe territorial government to simply "ensure that there continues to be an elementary school in downtown Whitehorse."

Community Services Minister Richard Mostynthen threw the ball into the city's court by asking it to find a suitable spot in the downtown core "so that future planning for a downtown school can occur."

McLean confirmed on Tuesday that the government is moving in that direction, though she provided no details.

"We also believe that schools are the heart of our community ... I want Yukoners to know that a downtown school is part of the Liberal government's vision for a strong, healthy and vibrant capital city," McLean said.

With files from Cheryl Kawaja