Cumberland County parents fight school closures, end to year-round calendar

Feb. 23, 2026, 5:03 a.m. ET

  • The board’s proposal includes closing nine schools, building three new ones, and transitioning all schools to a traditional calendar.
  • Opponents are organizing through petitions and social media, encouraging public participation in upcoming school board meetings.

More than 50 people gathered Feb. 19 at Cliffdale Community Church in opposition to the Cumberland County Board of Education’s recommendations to stop year-round schooling and potentially close and consolidate some schools.  

The event was hosted by parents of students at E.E. Miller Elementary School — a year-round school that is being considered for a traditional calendar.  

The parents presented data in support of year-round education, estimated costs to operate the year-round school, and have created a petition and online Facebook group for other others in Cumberland County to ask questions and make comments about the proposal.  

Year-round and traditional-calendar schools both use 180 instructional days. Year-round calendars typically follow 45 days of instruction with 15-day breaks, while traditional calendars provide about nine months of instruction followed by a three-month summer break.

The organizers encouraged other parents and community members to sign up to speak at the Board of Education’s next regular meeting at 6 p.m. March 10, in the school district’s board room at 2465 Gillespie St. in Fayetteville.  

E.E. Miller parents who helped organize a community meeting about recommendations to close Cumberland County Schools and end year-round classes address the crowd Feb. 19, 2026 at Cliffdale Community Church.

The Rev. Dale Paschall, senior pastor of Cliffdale Community Church, presented the information that he said E.E. Miller parents Leta Brown and Kenya Wall gathered from the Cumberland County Schools facilities assessment and the master planning services executive summary from January 2025.   

According to the facilities assessment, E.E. Miller is not among the worst school buildings in the district, and it has adequate space.  

Leave a Comment