Pasco County Schools is moving to eliminate close to 500 positions as the district confronts a steady slide in student enrollment — a shift driven less by families leaving the county than by where, and how, local children are being educated.
The Pasco County school district is cutting nearly 500 jobs ahead of an expected drop in enrollment, the Tampa Bay Times reported this week. District leaders have described the reductions as a response to falling student counts in its traditional schools, even as Pasco County’s overall population continues to climb.
The full breakdown of the cuts — including how many represent layoffs versus unfilled or vacated positions, and which campuses are most affected — has not been laid out in public detail. Officials have signaled that the clearest picture will come after students are counted in the fall.
A Growing County With Shrinking Classrooms
On its face, the situation seems contradictory. Pasco County remains one of the fastest-growing areas in the Tampa Bay region, and county records show nearly 30,000 new housing units have come online in just the past three years. Yet enrollment in the district’s own schools has been falling.
The explanation, district officials say, is largely about choice. Much of Pasco’s recent student growth has flowed into charter schools and state-funded vouchers rather than traditional district campuses. During the current school year, district enrollment fell by 1,393 students, while voucher participation grew by 1,965 and charter enrollment rose by 941, according to figures presented at a recent school board workshop.
A second factor is demographic. A decade ago, Pasco welcomed roughly 700 more kindergartners than the number of seniors graduating out of the system — a sign of a district still expanding. This year, the district enrolled about 495 fewer kindergartners than seniors, and next year it expects that gap to widen to roughly 1,050 fewer, a trend officials tie to Florida’s record-low birth rate.
The Divide: West Pasco vs. Wesley Chapel
For local families, one of the most important points is that the squeeze is not spread evenly across the county. Superintendent John Legg has described the enrollment picture as regional, with growth in one part of Pasco and decline in another.
In west Pasco, the numbers are falling fastest. Nine elementary schools on that side of the county are currently below 70 percent capacity, and the district has gradually closed under-enrolled campuses over several years.
| School | Status |
|---|---|
| Hudson Elementary | Closed 2020 |
| Mittye P. Locke Elementary | Closed 2023 |
| Calusa Elementary | Closed 2025 |
| Gulfside Elementary (Holiday) | Closure planned |
The eastern side of the county tells the opposite story. Wesley Chapel High and Wiregrass Ranch High are over capacity by more than 1,200 students combined, with the potential for thousands more as new housing fills in. Cypress Creek High, which opened in 2017 to relieve crowding, already sits at roughly 96 percent capacity. District planners have discussed building new campuses in the Wesley Chapel area even as they consider consolidating shrinking schools to the west.
Why This Matters for Pasco Families
Staffing reductions of this size can affect class sizes, support services, and the mix of programs offered at individual schools. Families on the west side of the county may also face longer-term questions about school consolidations, while crowding remains the pressing concern in the Wesley Chapel area. District leaders have said they will wait for fall student counts before making firm decisions on any further closures or reconfigurations.
Legg has cautioned that the district cannot simply wait for conditions to improve, noting that the state’s student projections proved inaccurate this year and that the true scope of the decline remains uncertain. Officials have said they expect to study a range of options over a 10-year window once fall enrollment is confirmed.
- Pasco County Schools is moving to eliminate close to 500 positions amid declining enrollment, according to the Tampa Bay Times.
- District enrollment dropped by 1,393 students this year, while vouchers grew by 1,965 and charters by 941.
- The decline is concentrated in west Pasco; Wesley Chapel and Wiregrass Ranch schools remain over capacity.
- Four west-side elementary schools have closed since 2020, with Gulfside Elementary in Holiday slated to close.
- District leaders say they will wait for fall student counts before deciding on further closures or consolidations.
- A detailed breakdown of the position cuts had not been released publicly as of this writing.
As the district finalizes its budget and prepares for the new school year, families across Pasco County are likely to be watching closely — both for clarity on which jobs and programs are affected, and for what the fall numbers reveal about the road ahead.
For more local news and updates from across Pasco County, visit www.pascocommunity.com and follow Pasco Community Website on Facebook and Instagram.
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