Sag Harbor Express

School Enrollment Numbers Hold Steady From Last Year, Mostly

authorAlec Giufurta on Sep 1, 2021

It’s back to the classroom, masked-up and at normal capacity for students on the East End — and with the unprecedented local population growth reported by the Census Bureau’s 2020 census, some school districts are seeing sustained enrollment increases from the past school year.

In the 2020-21 school season, enrollment increases from former New York City residents relocating to the East End impacted the Amagansett and Quogue school districts in particular — both educate from the pre-kindergarten through sixth grade level. Amagansett’s enrollment increased by 40 percent from the 2019-20 school year to the 2020-21 school year. Enrollment in Quogue increased by 33 percent over the same period.

This school year, the numbers are nearly holding: 141 students are registered to attend school in Amagansett, a 47-percent increase compared to the 2019-20 academic year. Enrollment in Quogue is up 20 percent compared to the 2019-20 academic year, with plans for 105 students in the building when bells ring on September 2.

Jeffrey Ryvicker, superintendent of the Quogue Union Free School District, estimated that 50 percent of students who registered locally in the 2020-21 school year after attending schools in New York City are staying in his district this year.

“We certainly have students that are going back to the city, but we also have families that have chosen to stay,” Mr. Ryvicker said. “Our greatest number of folks that came from the city, actually, their kids graduated last year.”

In Quogue, the school accommodated the extra students by adapting with non-traditional classroom spaces.

“We basically turned all of our rooms into classroom learning spaces — so our art room, for example, became a classroom,” Mr. Ryvicker said.

In Amagansett, the district hired three teachers in August 2020 to handle the influx of students. In the 2021-22 school budget, these positions were maintained, the superintendent of schools, Seth Turner, said in an email.

“The data we have to date seems to indicate that the majority of new students who came to Amagansett last year plan to remain as part of the school community,” Mr. Turner said. “These teaching positions … remain important for the school to adequately meet the needs of all learners.”

At other East End school districts, however, enrollment numbers are steady from their pre-pandemic levels.

In East Quogue, the kingdergarten through sixth grade school district did not see a significant change in enrollment through the pandemic, the superintendent, Robert Long said. He noted a few families joined the district after moving from New York City, but not enough to detract from the district’s enrollment projection modeling.

The Southampton School District also did not have an increase in enrollment with the pandemic-migration east, and reported a slightly lower enrollment number this school year compared to last. Last year, the school recorded 1,393 students on day one; this year, the school expects 1,353 to attend, according to data from the superintendent, Nicholas Dyno.

“Although our sale [and] rentals of home[s] within the district is really high for the past two years, our enrollment did not experience any of the growth,” Mr. Dyno said in an email. “Many of the new families stayed enrolled in their previous schools and attended remotely, hired teachers and participated in group ‘pods’ during the pandemic, or home schooled their children.”

The Hampton Bays School District also reported a slightly lower enrollment total, according to the superintendent Lars Clemensen. He noted that a declining birthrate is the primary reason for the trend — and the district projected this.

“Whatever that calendar year’s birth rate is for 11946, roughly 80 percent of that number will materialize as kindergarteners,” he said. “Because of the housing market, and we’re not seeing as much transience, that number was recently increased to 85 percent.”

Mr. Clemensen said this projection allows the district to forecast class sizes up to five years out.

The Sag Harbor School District’s enrollment total has increased slightly from the 2019-20 school year — a 2-percent increase from 2019-20 to 2020-21, and a 4-percent increase from 2021-22.

In East Hampton, the district’s high school felt the brunt of the small increase in enrollment during the pandemic, but decreases in enrollment at the John Marshall Elementary School balanced out the school’s total enrollment numbers, Adam Fine, the superintendent said. This year, the numbers are consistent from last year, he added.

“I’m happy that the numbers are where they are and they’re not blowing up right now, because we’re having a difficult time … hiring staff,” Mr. Fine said. He noted that the Ross School in East Hampton saw a “dramatic” increase in enrollment.

Ross School, which offers the only private high school level education on the East End, indeed saw an increase in enrollment in its non-boarding student population — the school offers a residential option for students in grades six through 12.

Andi Clare O’Hearn, the school’s head of advancement and operations, said a “really big jump” in enrollment occurred for their high school population during the 2020-21 school year. This year, Ross’s enrollment numbers are still high, with more families moving out from New York City.

“We had a number of families decide that they were going to move back to the city, but we had an equal number of families that decided to move out,” she said.

And this year, Ms. O’Hearn noted that the school’s boarding population increased as well. Last year, some international students were not able to travel to the U.S. because of health restrictions on travel.

Currently, the Ross School is considering COVID-19 vaccination requirements for a subset of eligible students, Ms. O’Hearn said. The school already requires them for faculty and staff.

You May Also Like:

A New 27east and More Big Changes for The Express News Group

The Express News Group is launching a brand-new 27east.com this month, a major step forward ... 13 Dec 2025 by 27Speaks

Sag Harbor Village Police Reports for the Week of December 11

SAG HARBOR VILLAGE — An officer responded to a call from a Rysam Street address a little after midnight on Saturday. The caller told the officer that a man wearing a black ski mask had walked onto her porch and banged on the front door then ran off. The woman provided the officer with surveillance video from her Ring camera, which visually confirmed what the woman said had happened. Police described the man as white, “approximately 6 feet tall, wearing a black ski mask, black hoodie with a red logo on the back, and wording on the left chest, a ... 12 Dec 2025 by Staff Writer

Harmony for the Holidays

Let’s be real: As jolly as the holidays can be, they can also be overwhelming. ... by Jessie Kenny

A Little Time, a Big Impact: Pierson's Interact Club Brings Joy to Seniors and Revives Blood Drive

Isabella Carmona DeSousa didn’t know much about Pierson’s Interact Club when she joined two years ... 11 Dec 2025 by Cailin Riley

Dear Neighbor

Congratulations on your new windows. They certainly are big. They certainly are see-through. You must be thrilled with the way they removed even more of that wall and replaced it with glass. It must make it easier to see what is going on in your house even when the internet is down. And security is everything. Which explains the windows. Nothing will make you feel more secure than imagining yourself looking over the rear-yard setback from these massive sheets of structural glass. Staring at the wall has well-known deleterious impact, and windows the size of movie screens are the bold ... by Marilee Foster

I Can Dish It Out

Our basement looks like the final scene in “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” where the (found) ark is crated and wheeled into the middle of a government warehouse with stacked crates going on for miles. In other words, we have a lot of stuff. This tracks. Mr. Hockey and I have been married for 36 (according to my calculator) years. We’ve had four (no calculator needed) pucks. We’ve lived in seven (according to my fingers) different homes in three (no calculator or fingers needed) countries. In 2010, we moved back to East Hampton full time. We brought everything we had ... by Tracy Grathwohl

The Urgency of Real

The Hamptons International Film Festival typically takes up a lot of oxygen in the fall on the South Fork, but it’s worth celebrating a slightly smaller but just as vital event in late autumn: the Hamptons Doc Fest. Running this week for its 18th year, the festival of documentaries was founded by Jacqui Lofaro and has become an essential part of the region’s arts scene every year. It’s a 12-month undertaking for Lofaro and her staff, and the result is always a tantalizing buffet of outstanding filmmaking, not to mention unforgettable stories. The arrival of the era of streaming services ... 10 Dec 2025 by Editorial Board

Hitting Pause

East Hampton’s housing shortage is real; the town can’t afford to ignore any potential long-term solutions. But the recent — and now scrapped — plan for a large employer-run complex on Three Mile Harbor Road raises too many questions that haven’t been fully answered. The proposal, put forward by Kirby Marcantonio and an unnamed partner, would have created 79 units of employer-controlled housing, comparable to a project he has pitched on Pantigo Road. To make it happen, the East Hampton Town Board would have had to allow the project to sidestep the town’s 60-unit limit on affordable developments, and rezone ... by Editorial Board

Proceed With Caution

Overlay districts are a common zoning tool used by many municipalities. Southampton Town has used them to varying degrees of success — the aquifer protection overlay district has been a winner; a downtown overlay district in Hampton Bays less so — in various parts of the town. They essentially look at the existing zoning, then allow those rules governing what can be done on properties to be reconsidered if there’s a newer concern to be addressed. In a bid to clean up the process for creating more affordable housing, the Town Board is looking at a new overlay district that ... by Editorial Board

The Whole Picture

When it comes to evaluating a complex development proposal, splitting up the application into separate parts may seem tempting, especially when environmental uncertainties loom. But in the case of Adam Potter’s plan for 7 and 11 Bridge Street, the Sag Harbor Village Planning Board should resist any temptation to segment the project for review. Potter’s attorney has asked the board to consider the gas ball property at 5 Bridge Street — a site that could provide the 93 parking spaces required for Potter’s 48 residential units and commercial spaces nearby — separate from the main development. The reason is understandable: ... by Editorial Board