Cleveland, OH
Cleveland Schools announces massive consolidation plan to close 23 buildings
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland Schools expects to close 23 buildings and operate 29 fewer schools under a sweeping restructuring plan that would amount to the district’s largest overhaul in decades.
Cleveland Metropolitan School District CEO Warren Morgan said the changes are necessary to confront steep drops in enrollment, rising operating costs and a looming $150 million deficit. Changes would take effect before the 2026-2027 school year.
The plan, introduced to the school board Wednesday night, would save CMSD at least $30 million annually if approved. Those savings would mostly come from the district cutting administrative staff, including principals and assistant principals, on account of reducing the number of schools.
Morgan told cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer that the number of teachers should stay roughly the same as CMSD’s footprint shrinks, but some layoffs and new hires may occur, as the schools need different personnel.
Consolidation won’t just save money, Morgan said, but will also allow CMSD to offer a better education to more students.
He said during Wednesday’s board meeting that Cleveland’s schools have “pockets of excellence.” Some schools have great academics and others have great sports programs. But to offer all students an excellent education and extracurriculars, action is needed.
The plan significantly shrinks CMSD’s physical footprint. The district will go from 61 PreK–8 schools to 45, and from 27 high schools to 14. Amid the consolidation, 18 CMSD-owned buildings will be closed, and five leased spaces currently used as schools will also be phased out.
In some cases, students won’t change school buildings at all. Several Cleveland high schools like John Hay and John Marshall contain three different “schools” on one campus, each with its own administration.
In those cases, the campus will become one high school. Morgan said specialized programs currently offered at the schools will continue even after the mergers.
Some schools will not merge but will move to a better-maintained building that has capacity.
Morgan emphasized that nearly all of the changes are mergers, not straight closures. This means students won’t be dispersed, and their entire school community can move together into a new building. Cleveland schools also allow school choice, which gives students an opportunity to move freely if parents desire.
District officials say 95% of affected students will move into schools in stronger building conditions, and all students will gain expanded academic and extracurricular opportunities.
Morgan acknowledged the deep disruption that school closings will cause, but he said the district cannot maintain a system built for twice as many students as it now serves.
Since 2000, CMSD’s enrollment has dropped by more than 50%, from 70,000 students in 2000 to 34,000 today. Morgan attributed that downward trend to the drop in the region’s birthrate, not losing students to charters or private schools.
But CMSD largely uses the same footprint as it did 25 years ago.
Because of low enrollment, there are fewer than 5,000 students currently enrolled in schools that will either be merged or moved amid the consolidation plan.
Morgan said additional central-office and administrative cuts will still be needed to stabilize CMSD’s long-term finances.
The board is expected to vote on CMSD’s consolidation plan Dec. 9. Morgan said he does not expect any changes to the plan between now and December, saying district officials have done public engagement for over a year.
Many students and parents want the decision made soon, Morgan said, so they can start preparing.
Here are CMSD’s recommended school mergers and closures.
K-8 schools merging
Students from the “transitioning school” will move into the building of the “welcoming school.”
• Hannah Gibbons will merge into Memorial (students move to the Memorial building)
• Euclid Park will merge into East Clark (East Clark building)
• Stephanie Tubbs Jones will merge with Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR building, renamed Stephanie Tubbs Jones)
• Mary M. Bethune will merge into Daniel E. Morgan (Daniel E. Morgan building)
• Mary B. Martin will merge into Wade Park (Wade Park building)
• Alfred A. Benesch will merge into George Washington Carver (Carver building)
• Bolton will merge into Harvey Rice (Harvey Rice building)
• Charles Dickens will merge into Andrew J. Rickoff (Rickoff building)
• Adlai Stevenson will merge into Whitney M. Young Leadership (Whitney Young building)
• Miles will merge into Robert H. Jamison (Jamison building)
• Mound will merge into Albert Bushnell Hart (Hart building)
• Mary Church Terrell will merge into Wilbur Wright (Wilbur Wright building, renamed Wilbur Wright School of the Arts)
• Waverly and Louisa May Alcott will merge into Joseph M. Gallagher (Gallagher building)
• Charles A. Mooney will merge into Denison (Denison building)
• Valley View Boys’ Leadership Academy will merge with Kenneth Clement Boys’ Leadership Academy ** (Mary M. Bethune building)
K–8 specialty schools moving to improved buildings
These schools keep their programs but move into buildings that are in better condition.
• Stonebrook–White Montessori will move into the Stephanie Tubbs Jones building (renamed Michael R. White Montessori)
• Kenneth Clement Boys’ Leadership, merged with Valley View, will move into the Mary M. Bethune building (renamed Kenneth W. Clement Boys’ Leadership Academy)
• Dike School of the Arts will move into the Mound building (renamed Dike School of the Arts)
• Tremont Montessori will move into the Waverly building (renamed Waverly Montessori)
High schools merging
Students from the “transitioning school” move into a “welcoming school” building.
• Collinwood High School will merge with Glenville High School (Glenville building)
• Campus International High School will merge with John Hay High School (John Hay building)
• MC2STEM High School will merge with East Tech High School (East Tech building)
• New Tech West and Facing History New Tech High School will merge with James Ford Rhodes High School (Rhodes building)
High schools merging within their existing campuses
Merged into a single high school at the campus’s main building.
• John Hay Campus: the Cleveland School of Science & Medicine, Cleveland School of Architecture and Design and Cleveland Early College High School will all become John Hay High School
• Benjamin O. Davis High School: the Davis Aerospace and Maritime High School and Cleveland High School for Digital Arts will merge
• John Marshall Campus: the John Marshall School of Civic & Business Leadership, John Marshall School of Engineering and John Marshall School of Information Technology will become John Marshall High School
• Lincoln-West Campus: the Lincoln-West School of Global Studies and Lincoln-West School of Science and Health will become Lincoln-West High School
• James Ford Rhodes Campus: the James Ford Rhodes College and Career Academy and James Ford Rhodes School of Environmental Studies will become James Ford Rhodes High School
• Garrett Morgan Campus: the Garrett Morgan School of Engineering & Innovation and Garrett Morgan School of Leadership & Innovation will become Garrett Morgan High School
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Cleveland, OH
Cruise season begins in CLE, could be one of bigget yet
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WJW) — Cleveland is once again setting sail into cruise season — and this year could be its biggest yet.
The Port of Cleveland welcomed its first ship of 2026 on Tuesday, bringing visitors and a boost to the local economy along with it. Local leaders told Fox 8 that this is just the beginning.
“This is a great day. It’s officially the kickoff of the 2026 cruise season in Northeast Ohio and at the Port of Cleveland,” said Dave Gutheil, chief operating officer at the Port of Cleveland.
The arrival marked the start of what could be a record-breaking cruise season for the Port of Cleveland. Since launching cruise operations in 2017 with just nine ship visits, the port now expects 57 — its highest ever.
“Really a big economic impact on the city. Each passenger spends about $100 to $150 when they come in. So, we should have close to 10,000 passengers this year,” said Gutheil.
That excitement is exactly what local leaders are counting on as cruise tourism continues to grow year after year. Visitors are stepping off ships and straight into Cleveland’s top attractions — from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to the West Side Market and beyond.
“We are super excited. We have friends here, they’re going to show us around,” said cruise passengers, Margaret Niehaus and Robert Niehaus from Santa Barbara, Ca.
For travelers from across the country like the Niehaus’, the Great Lakes cruise is both scenic and personal.
“The cruise is great. The food is delicious, the staff is great, the ship, only about 200 passengers, it is very nice, really intimate,” the Niehaus’ said.
Victory I carries about 200 passengers on 10-to-14-day Great Lakes routes, with stops including Chicago, Toronto and Cleveland. For many, it’s a chance to see the Great Lakes in a completely different way.
“The Great Lakes are a very special ecosystem, very special environment, of course, you know, and having a chance to see them from the shore is a lifetime experience for a lot of people,” said cruise passenger Steve Kaverman from Denver, Colo.
Ships like this will continue arriving through mid-October — bringing thousands more visitors to Cleveland’s waterfront.
“If you see passengers from the cruise vessels out in Northeast Ohio, wish them a warm welcome to Cleveland and let’s put out the red carpet for them,” said Gutheil.
Trips can be booked directly through Victory Cruise Lines website. Port officials said they expect both visitor numbers and economic impact to keep growing in the years ahead.
Cleveland, OH
Ohio candidate Nicole Sigurdson apologies for antisemitic remark
Among the Democratic Party primary races Signal Cleveland is following is the one for Ohio House District 19, which has drawn three major candidates to the open seat. (Incumbent Phillip Robinson Jr., of Solon, is term-limited.) The district includes Cleveland’s Old Brooklyn neighborhood and all or portions of a string of eastern and southeastern suburbs.
The Cuyahoga County Democratic Party’s endorsed candidate is Nicole Sigurdson, a Cleveland resident and union organizer with SEIU District 1199 who narrowly won enough support to secure the party’s influential backing.
But Sigurdson has been under fire from fellow party members and others for a comment she made on social media in 2025 about the Israel-Hamas war. Her comment – which she has since deleted – especially stood out because her district includes communities with sizable Jewish populations, including Solon and Pepper Pike.
In the post, Sigurdson shared an image of the Palestinian flag that read, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” It was a phrase used by protesters against the war. Prior, it was used for years by some advocating for the elimination of the state of Israel. And it’s been a slogan used by terrorist groups.
She posted a video earlier this year apologizing for the post.
“The post contained an image with an antisemitic slogan of which I failed to grasp the full significance of,” she said. “At the time, several people reached out to me expressing their hurt and sharing the full context of the phrase. After listening carefully to their concerns, I immediately deleted the post, but I should have known not to post it at all.”
Signal asked Sigurdson what motivated her original post. She said it was made in reaction to seeing a lot of coverage of Palestinian civilian deaths in Gaza during the war. (The Hamas terrorist attack in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killed 1,200 civilians and Hamas took 250 people hostage. Israeli’s military response left tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza dead.)
“I made them out of humanitarian concern, wanting autonomy for all people, wanting safety for all people,” Sigurdson said. “And part of what has driven me to politics is I never want to shy away from controversial topics.”
Fliers were recently mailed to residents in Solon attacking Sigurdson for her antisemitic comments. One flyer featured the headlines from a Cleveland Jewish News story about the comments. “Nicole Sigurdson is wrong for Ohio,” it read.
Sigurdson is campaigning around workers’ rights, including increasing the minimum wage, protecting the environment and the need to be more “caring about people.”
She faces two candidates in the primary: Dionne M. Gore of Solon, who works for Medical Mutual and is backed by Robinson; and Cheryl Perez, a small business owner from Brecksville, who was endorsed by Cleveland.com/The Plain Dealer.
(There was only one Republican primary candidate, but he recently died unexpectedly.)
Cleveland, OH
April 27, 2026 Road Trip: Lessons In History
My Cleveland History
https://myclevelandhistory.com/
Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Library & Museums
Spiegel Grove, Fremont, OH 43420
https://www.rbhayes.org
Underground Railroad Museum
121 High St, Flushing, OH 43977
https://www.ugrrm.org
Fort Laurens Museum
11067 Fort Laurens Rd.
Bolivar, Ohio 44697
https://www.fortlaurensmuseum.org
WACO Air Museum
1865 South County Road 25A Troy, OH 45373
https://www.wacoairmuseum.org
Millbury Classic Cars and Trucks Museum
26929 Cummings, Millbury, OH, United States, Ohio
https://www.facebook.com/people/Millbury-Classics/61557016196078/?sk=about
McKinley Presidential Library and Museum
800 McKinley Monument Drive NW
Canton, OH 44708
https://mckinleymuseum.org
Blennerhassett Island Historical State Park
137 Juliana Street, Parkersburg, WV 26101
https://wvstateparks.com/park/blennerhassett-island-historical-state-park/
Anne Frank Haus
Westermarkt 20
1016 DK Amsterdam
https://www.annefrank.org/en
D-Day Ohio WWII Museum
851 Harbor St., Conneaut, OH
https://ddayohio.us
William G. Mather Steamship
601 Erieside Ave,
Cleveland, OH 44114
https://greatscience.com/explore/exhibits/william-g-mather-steamship
The John & Annie Glenn Museum
72 West Main Street
New Concord, Ohio 43762
https://www.johnandannieglennmuseum.org
Cleveland History Center
10825 East Boulevard
Cleveland, Ohio 44106
https://www.wrhs.org/plan-visit/places-to-visit/cleveland-history-center/welcome
The Garfield Trail of Ohio
https://www.garfieldtrail.org
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