Indianapolis charter school announces intent to acquire IPS school building if it closes

Two people wearing blue shirts sit at a desk.
Victory College Prep charter school hopes to acquire Paul Miller School 114 if Indianapolis Public Schools approves it for closure in November. (Dylan Peers McCoy / Chalkbeat)

A charter school within Indianapolis Public Schools borders is hoping to acquire Paul Miller Elementary School 114 if the school board approves its closure next month. 

Victory College Prep, a K-12 school just half a mile from School 114, hopes to use the property to accommodate its growing enrollment.

“The Paul Miller property is just two city blocks from the VCP campus — and annually, in recent years, we’ve welcomed a growing number of Paul Miller transfer students into our VCP classrooms,” Ryan Gall, the school’s executive director, told the board on Thursday. 

Paul Miller School 114 is one of several school buildings proposed for closure under the Rebuilding Stronger plan. (Amelia Pak-Harvey / Chalkbeat)

The district’s Rebuilding Stronger plan — an attempt to address declining enrollment amid charter school growth — would leave multiple school buildings open for charter schools to potentially occupy. Victory College Prep is the first to publicly announce its intentions to acquire such a building.

State law allows charter schools to lease or acquire empty school buildings for $1. 

Six school buildings would become vacant at the end of this school year under the final draft of the Rebuilding Stronger plan.School 114 is one of the two schools proposed for closure that would merge with other existing schools. 

A seventh building, Sidener Academy for High Ability Students, could also become available in the 2026-27 school year when those students move to a new building at the site of former Joyce Kilmer School 69.  

IPS Superintendent Aleesia Johnson has said she hopes to work with lawmakers and keep the buildings under district ownership

But timing dictated by state statute may throw a wrench in those plans. That’s because within 10 days of a vote to close a school building, the district must notify the state of the building’s availability. The next legislative session begins in 2023.

Victory College Prep, which has roughly 900 students, hopes to increase enrollment to as high as 1,600 students by 2025, Gall told Chalkbeat Indiana. 

“This is just too good of an opportunity to not consider and pursue, given the dynamics at play,” he said, noting that the school is turning away students in grades 7-12 every year due to space limitations.

More than 80% of the school’s population are students of color and economically disadvantaged. 

In 2022, 14.9% of students at Victory College Prep were proficient in both English and math on state exams, slightly above the IPS average of 14.1%. That proficiency rate at the school is higher than its pre-pandemic rate of 12.3% in 2019.

Gall told the school board that he hopes the school will enter into a partnership with the district. 

“We would also hope to collaborate on this transition for the school community,” he said, “but are prepared to utilize all available legal pathways to acquire the facility, including purchasing the school under the $1 unused facility statute.”

The school board will consider the final Rebuilding Stronger plan for a vote on No. 17. 

Amelia Pak-Harvey covers Indianapolis and Marion County schools for Chalkbeat Indiana. Contact Amelia at apak-harvey@chalkbeat.org.

The Latest

The immediate financial impact on districts' budgets, especially for rural schools the formula is designed to help, would likely be a mixed bag, superintendents say.

District leaders say the new cameras are meant to make schools safer and will not result in an invasion of privacy.

Districts enrolled a total of 8,085 newcomer students after the October count and through Feb. 29.

The announcement set off alarm bells for school integration advocates, who worry it could roll back progress diversifying several high-demand schools.

By the fall, the Cherry Creek district will offer preschool at every elementary school.

The Academy for Local Leadership launched its inaugural class in March ahead of Chicago’s shift to a partially-elected school board.