Dollarway School District


Dollarway School District is a school district headquartered in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, United States. With over 1,600 students and employing more than 300 educators and staff, the district currently has three active school campuses.
It serves sections of Pine Bluff as well as Altheimer, Sherrill, and Wabbaseka. It is one of four school districts to serve sections of Pine Bluff. A small portion of White Hall is in the Dollarway school district. It also serves the unincorporated areas of Tucker, Plum Bayou, Pastoria, and Wright.

History

The Altheimer Unified School District consolidated into the Dollarway School District on July 10, 2006. This consolidation meant that small towns and rural areas in northern Jefferson County, including Altheimer, Sherrill, Wabbaseka, Tucker, and Plum Bayou, became a part of the district. For a period the consolidated district had two taxation rates, one for the original Dollarway district and one for the former Altheimer Unified. In addition the district operated two bus mechanic stops, with the Pine Bluff one serving the majority of the district and the Altheimer one moving children from the Altheimer area to the schools in Pine Bluff.
The Arkansas Department of Education took control of the school district in 2012 due to failing to meet state education guidelines. In 2014 state control ended and the school board resumed operations. State control resumed in 2015 due to low test scores. The State of Arkansas designated the school district as being in "academic distress" from 2011 until 2016, and after an audit found issues in financial reporting, in April 2016 the Arkansas Board of Education also ruled that the district was in "fiscal distress".
the Dollarway School Board exempted the district from a state law that normally allows parents in one school district to have their children sent to attend schools in another school district. Parents from seven families, including the president of the Dollarway Parent Teacher Organization, Annie Bryant, argued against the exemption; Bryant stated that due to the large number of students on free or reduced lunch, it was clear that the students had no other choice but to go to public schools, and therefore the district ought to allow transfers. As of that year there were no persons requesting that their children be transferred from another school district to the Dollarway district.

Demographics

In 2015, according to Bryant, about 98% of the district's students were on free or reduced lunches.

Schools

Open:
Closed: