Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
The impending shutdowns — a trend that is expected to continue in the coming years — add to more than three dozen public schools that have closed or consolidated since the pandemic disrupted classroom learning. That list includes shuttered elementary schools in Cambridge, North Middlesex, and Wellesley, and approximately nine charter schools.
District leaders have pursued the closures and mergers to balance operating budgets amid declining enrollment and rising costs for special education, transportation, utilities, and other expenses, or to curb spending on replacing antiquated school buildings as construction costs have soared.
The efforts have sparked scores of protests from parents, educators, and other community members, who worry about losing close-knit communities and whether districts will be short on space if enrollment rebounds.
In Acton, Molly Sparrow will be constantly reminded of the Conant School’s closure long after the final bell rings in June. The school is across the street from her home, and her children, who attend the second and fourth grades there, will be reassigned to other schools under a plan to address declining enrollment.
“It was a very tough pill to swallow for me and my kids,” Sparrow said, but added that they have now “gone through the stages of grief” and are focused on building something positive for next year.
The consolidation and closures come as the state’s public school enrollment hit a 30-year low this year. The shrinking student population, which intensified during the pandemic and then again amid President Trump’s recent crackdown on immigration, has resulted in a growing number of empty classroom seats.
Just how much extra space is there? A recent report by the Massachusetts School Building Authority found half of the nearly 1,600 schools assessed last year operated at less than 80 percent capacity — more than twice the rate in 2010 — resulting in approximately 275,000 extra seats.
The MSBA anticipates more schools will close and merge in the coming years, noting it is working with a dozen districts, including Scituate, Westford, and Ipswich, on potential school construction proposals that could involve consolidating two or more schools. Some projects, such as one in Wilmington, have already received voter approval.
Many of those proposed mergers involve small elementary schools erected decades ago, which are often plagued with a variety of problems, such as outdated heating and electrical systems and undersized classrooms, or lack basic amenities like cafeterias or gymnasiums.
Swampscott, for instance, replaced three small elementary schools in 2024 with a new building that opened with more than 700 students.
But the promise of new buildings isn’t always enough to entice support for mergers, with voters rejecting such projects in West Bridgewater in February and Hamilton-Wenham in September.
Devotion to a cherished school can also motivate voters to approve hefty property tax hikes for operating budgets to avoid a closure, such as Belmont’s approval of an $8.4 million tax override in 2024 that saved one of its elementary schools.
So far, the more than three dozen schools that have closed or merged since the pandemic disrupted classroom learning have generated a small reduction in public schools statewide — about 2 percent, according to a Globe review of state data. Just over 1,800 schools are operating this year.
The downsizing is nevertheless amounting to the most active period since districts grappled with the financial fallout from the Great Recession about two decades ago, although at a somewhat smaller scale, the Globe review found.
The analysis relied on the overall number of public schools operating annually in Massachusetts over 20 years to track periods of contraction and expansion.
Compared with most other states, the current reductions in Massachusetts appear to be more robust. The nationwide closure rate hovers around 1 percent and has repeatedly fallen below that in recent years, according to a report last year by the Brookings Institution and IZA Institute of Labor Economics.
“Permanent school closures are a rare phenomenon‚” Sofoklis Goulas, the report’s author, said in an interview.
Given projections indicating public school enrollment will continue declining, Goulas said he anticipates more school closures in the future. A variety of factors, he said, are shrinking enrollment, including declining birth rates and an increase in parents choosing private schools, homeschooling, and other alternatives amid lingering concerns over pandemic learning loss.
“A recommendation would be to plan early because closures are a very painful thing for any community,” he said.
In Acton-Boxborough, Superintendent Peter Light said the district’s reorganization of its elementary schools, which calls for changing grade configurations and closing Conant, was an attempt to proactively address declining enrollment.
“Our buildings are not so substantially under capacity that this was a slam dunk,” he said. But he added, ”The resources flowing to the schools weren’t sufficient to keep doing what we need to do for kids.“
The district has cut dozens of positions in recent years, he noted, and finances will remain tight into the foreseeable future.
One of the most ambitious potential mergers is unfolding in Western Massachusetts. The Mohawk Trail and Hawlemont regional school districts are exploring a merger, which could result in closing all elementary schools and relocating students to Mohawk’s secondary school, which would be slightly renovated.
Martha Thurber, chair of the Mohawk Trail School Committee, said consolidating schools into a single campus is critical to ensuring the future viability of Mohawk Trail amid steep enrollment declines and escalating operating costs.
Many elementary school classrooms have only five or six students in them, she said, while merging could result in making unique programs at various elementary schools available to all students, such as an agricultural program at Hawlemont Regional School, which includes a barn with animals.
But convincing voters to support the proposal will be “a hard slog,” with many questions raised about long bus rides and what to do with the empty buildings.
“There are a lot of folks who don’t want to lose their elementary school,” she said. “Our real challenge is to make them see they are not losing an elementary school, they are gaining something much better.”
Across Massachusetts, scores of shuttered schools have been converted into housing or spaces for administrative offices, community organizations, or preschool programs.
In Newton, debate over merging the approximately 100-year-old Underwood and Ward elementary schools into a proposed new building has dragged on for seven years.
Parents are worried that consolidating would obliterate the small neighborhood feel of their schools, which each have fewer than 300 students and are about a mile apart.
“It really is the heart of the community,” said Maggie Elitt, of the Underwood, where her daughters attend the second and fifth grades.
Amy Davis, who has a fourth-grade daughter at Underwood, said she is worried Newton hasn’t thought through the merger, noting Underwood’s enrollment is rebounding amid a districtwide decline in students.
“The general consensus of Underwood is just leave us alone, we are good, our school is 100 years old, and the gym ceiling leaks a little bit, but we are happy for the most part,“ Davis said. ”It would be cool to have a new school, but it’s OK if we don’t.”
Josh Morse, chief operating officer for the City of Newton, said the city is carefully evaluating enrollment trends.
“The question is, when we build a new school, are we going to see an increase in the number of students who come back into the public school system?” he said, noting several parents have opted for private schools because of building conditions. “That variability makes the decision about consolidation even more challenging because we want to make sure that we don’t make a mistake.”
Christopher Huffaker of the Globe staff contributed to this report.
James Vaznis can be reached at james.vaznis@globe.com. Follow him @globevaznis.
Local News
Lowell residents have filed a lawsuit against a data center and state environmental regulators, alleging the facility has harmed their neighborhood and that officials unlawfully sidestepped public oversight during its approval process.
The complaint, filed April 27 in Middlesex County Superior Court, targets the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection and the data center’s owner, Markley Group. The 10 plaintiffs — members of a grassroots group known as Honest Future for Lowell — say the facility’s growth has disrupted life in the city’s Sacred Heart and Back Central neighborhoods, both long designated as environmental justice communities.
At the center of the lawsuit is a 352,000-square-foot data center that residents say looms over nearby homes, with cooling tower mist settling on properties and diesel generators contributing to noise and emissions. The filing alleges industrial generators sit behind a neighborhood little league field and that surveillance cameras monitor surrounding streets and backyards.
Attorneys for the plaintiffs say the lawsuit is the first against a data center in Massachusetts, potentially setting a precedent as similar facilities rapidly expand nationwide alongside growing artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The residents are represented by attorneys from Yale Law School’s Environmental Justice Law and Advocacy Clinic and the Conservation Law Foundation. Their legal challenge focuses on the DEP’s approval of a July 2025 air quality permit for the site and what plaintiffs describe as an “unlawful” administrative agreement that allowed construction during an ongoing appeal.
Stephanie Safdi, a Yale Law School professor representing the plaintiffs through the school’s Environmental Justice Law and Advocacy Clinic, said the lawsuit challenges both the DEP’s approval of an air permit for eight new diesel generators and the agency’s issuance of an “administrative consent order” that allowed construction to proceed before the appeals process concluded.
“We think it is unauthorized or unlawful permission for the company to go ahead and undertake these activities without going through the full permitting process,” Safdi said.
The dispute began in 2025, when Markley applied for an air permit to add eight new diesel generators at the site, bringing the total to 27 generators and 16 cooling towers. The DEP approved the permit on July 3, 2025. The residents appealed weeks later, but it was denied in August, according to the lawsuit. They were told they could continue the appeal individually as “aggrieved persons,” leading to the April 2026 lawsuit.
The plaintiffs are asking the court to revoke both the DEP’s air permit approval and the consent order, arguing the latter exceeds the agency’s authority.
Alexandra Enrique St. Pierre, vice president for the Conservation Law Foundation’s environmental justice program and a representative for the plaintiffs, framed the case as being about power imbalances between Markley, the state, and the community.
“This case is about fairness to a community that is simply trying to go about their lives in a place that they’ve called home for years and have a say in what that looks like,” St. Pierre said. “Pretty much everything that DEP and Markley have done in this case has been designed to exclude residents.”
She called the consent order a “secret side process.”
“Without telling anyone, they had entered into an administrative consent order to allow Markley to proceed as though the permit had already been granted,” she said.
The lawsuit comes amid growing scrutiny of data centers nationwide, as demand rises with the expansion of artificial intelligence infrastructure. In Lowell, it also follows a recent city council vote to impose a temporary moratorium on new data center construction and expansion.
For residents, the lawsuit reflects years of frustration.
Plaintiff Mary Wambui, who has lived in Lowell since 2002, became involved after learning about plans to add more diesel generators to the data center.
“I decided to start going to the city council meetings and adding my voice,” she said.
Her concerns deepened when residents discovered construction activity during the appeal process.
“We were like, how did this happen in the middle of an appeal?” Wambui said.
Another plaintiff, Jacob Fortes, lives in a home that lies along the facility’s southern border where four diesel engines sit behind his house, the closest one being 84 feet away.
“How that was ever allowed to happen … is a fundamental breakdown,” he said.
Fortes said on a windy day, fumes from the diesel engines will come into the second story of his house, calling it “the nightmare situation of which I’ve been in for 10 years.”
“At the end of the day, I just want a balance of power between residents, companies, and state bodies,” Wambui said.
The Markley Group did not respond to Boston.com’s request for comment.
For the plaintiffs, it’s a cautionary tale for other communities facing data center development.
“The larger world needs to see what is going on in Lowell, Massachusetts,” Fortes said.
Lowell residents v. MassDEP, Markley
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
Here are notable performances from boys’ lacrosse players competing in Eastern Mass. conferences/leagues in the past week.
Henry Fowler, Dover-Sherborn — The senior attack posted 10 points (7 goals, 3 assists) in wins over Wayland (9-2) and Norwood (11-4), helping the Raiders reach 400 wins as a program.
Jackson Gearin, Billerica — The hero of last June’s thrilling D2 state final continues to find the back of the net. The junior tallied 13 goals and two assists in Merrimack Valley wins over Andover (7-6), North Andover (14-2), and Central Catholic (16-5).
Jack McCavanagh and Luke Renzi, Manchester Essex — Renzi went 19 for 25 at the faceoff-X and scored five goals, and senior captain Jack McCavanagh racked up six goals and six assists in wins over Hamilton-Wenham (11-10) and Triton (13-4).
Sam O’Brien, Marshfield — Leading the Rams to their first win over Hingham (8-6) in a decade, followed by a 15-2 victory over North Attleborough, the senior went 23 for 29 at the faceoff-X and added 3 points (2 goals, assist).
Jacoby Patterson, Shawsheen — Pacing the Rams offense with 11 goals and seven assists in wins over Pentucket (15-9), Winthrop (17-4), and Nashoba Valley Tech (19-1), the senior attack helped the undefeated Rams remain undefeated and debut in the Globe’s Top 20 poll.
Levi Tripp, Bridgewater-Raynham — The freshman attack has 11 goals over his last four games and posted a career-best 7 points (5 goals, 2 assists) in Tuesday’s 14-2 win at Plymouth South.
Nate Weitzer can be reached at nweitzer7@gmail.com. Follow him on X @nweitzer7.
LYNNFIELD — A wrong-way driver in a Jeep, later identified as Hernan Marrero, 50, of Roslindale, traveling south in the northbound lanes of Route 1 at 2:04 a.m. Wednesday crashed into a Massachusetts State Police cruiser, killing the driver at the scene and critically injuring State Trooper Kevin Trainor, who later died at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Trainor, who served with the Essex County Sheriff’s Department as a dedicated correctional officer from 2021 to 2023, was remembered by the department.
“In that time, he made a meaningful impact on those around him. He was known for his professionalism, his strong work ethic, and the genuine care he showed for his fellow officers and the people he served,” a statement from the Essex County Sheriff’s Department said.
It continued, “Kevin was someone his colleagues could count on. He was steady, respectful, and committed to doing the job the right way. His decision to continue his career with the Massachusetts State Police reflected his deep commitment to public service and his desire to protect others. Trooper Kevin Trainor will be remembered for his dedication, service, and sacrifice. He will always remain part of the Essex County Sheriff’s Department family.”
A press conference was held at the State Police Danvers Barracks with Gov. Maura Healey, Colonel Geoffrey Noble, and President of the State Police Association of Massachusetts Brian Williams.
“Today, the Massachusetts State Police mourns the line of duty death of trooper Kevin Trainor, who was senselessly killed this morning by a wrong-way driver,” said Noble, who is the superintendent of Mass State Police.
Noble said that Trainor’s shift had ended at 2 a.m. and that he had begun his commute home when a call came in for a wrong-way driver on Route 1 northbound in Lynnfield.
“Several dedicated troopers in the area responded, converging to the area and located the vehicle traveling the wrong way at 2:03 a.m. And just one minute later, at 2:04 a.m., a Jeep collided with Trooper Trainor’s cruiser head-on,” he said.
Later, he noted that Trainor had done what all troopers do on and off duty: “be there to help.”
Noble continued that the reckless actions of the driver “stole” Trainor from his family, including his “brothers and sisters with the Massachusetts State Police.”
“Today and always, we will stand beside them to support them in honor of Kevin’s memory… We will never forget his service as a decorated Massachusetts State Trooper. At just 30 years old, a trooper of only three years, Kevin epitomized what it means to be a public servant in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,” he said.
Noble said that Trainor had mentored others and set the standard for professionalism.
“He earned a place on the prestigious Troop A Community Action Team. It patrolled our roads with a singular focus: keeping the people of this Commonwealth safe,” he said. “… As one person put it, he was the guy you wanted as your backup. Not just on the job, but in his personal life too.”
Noble described Trainor’s actions as heroic and said that he was certain that if Trainor hadn’t stepped in, many more tragedies would have occurred.
“I am grateful to stand in this moment with our governor, the secretary of public safety, and our law enforcement partners today as we honor an extraordinary man, son, fiancée, brother, nephew, and friend who gave his life in service of others,” Noble said.
Healey expressed her condolences to Trainor’s family, stating that the Commonwealth had lost a hero.
“He was doing heroic work… Kevin came from a family of public service. His siblings, who I met, (an) EMT, a firefighter, a physician’s assistant, among others. And Kevin was about public service,” Healey said.
She continued that everyone should take the time to express gratitude toward law enforcement and that she will make sure the Commonwealth honors Trainor and his family.
Williams stated that he and the rest of the association are deeply saddened by Trainor’s death.
“His actions reflect the very essence of service and dedication to the communities we serve. Trooper Trainor is a hero. He served with courage, integrity, and an unwavering commitment to the state police, to his fellow troopers, and to the citizens of this Commonwealth,” Williams said.
He continued that the associations, Noble and his command staff, and the entire membership are working to support the Trainor family and department members.
The case remains under investigation by the Massachusetts State Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section, Troop A Detectives, Crime Scene Services Section, State Police Detectives assigned to the Essex County District Attorney’s Office, and the Office of the Chief
Medical Examiner, according to the Massachusetts Essex District Attorney’s office.
Maryland State Police seek help in finding missing Wicomico juvenile
Michigan cities rethink
Lowell residents file Massachusetts’ first lawsuit against a data center
Local festivals benefit from new Minnesota Humanities Center grants
Powerful tornadoes ravage hundreds of homes across Mississippi
Montana Spring Can Still Feel Like Winter
Nebraska driver hits 160 mph fleeing state troopers on Interstate 80
‘Egregiously unsafe’: Nevada attorney general sues Discord