7 5¢ DETROIT1 THE JEWI S H NEWS Puddle Jumpers Families are moving a matter of blocks to be in a different school district. JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER hen Perry Rosen stands at the kitchen window of her new house, she can see her old house a street away. The same is al- most true for the Cohens and Klars, who can visit their old neighborhood on an evening stroll or bike ride. The three Jewish families puddle- jumped into nearby subdivisions based on their common belief: their children will get a better education in West Bloomfield schools than in the Walled Lake Consolidated School District. They say the repeated failure of voters in Walled Lake to approve additional funds to build or renovate new schools prompted their decision to move into a different school district. Some local developers say they're aware of at least a dozen Jewish families leav- ing the district because of a perception that Walled Lake schools aren't on par with West Bloomfield's. But, they agree, Walled Lake is still a hot area for families moving west. Enrollment in the schools is growing as the population burgeons. "I could see what was happening three or four years ago with all the building go- ing on and the lack of places to put people," Patty Cohen said. "I knew it was going to be overcrowded soon, and I didn't want my house to be up for sale with 20 other hous- es. After we sold our house, a bunch went up for sale." Two years ago, Patty and her husband Hiram moved their family, Stephen, 14, and Michelle, 11, from Timber's Edge at Farmington and 14 Mile roads to Woodcliff on the Lake, three miles away. The Cohens liked Pleasant Lake Elementary School, where both children attended before they moved. But, "we noticed how the schools in Walled Lake were not exactly what we'd hoped for in upper-level education. ...I don't mean the people in Walled Lake don't care about education, but it was much more fo- cused in West Bloomfield," Mrs. Cohen ex- plained. Perry and Nathan Rosen are waiting for their house to be completed in Village Square, a new development connected on the east to Timber's Edge, their old sub- division. In the interim, they are living in a nearby apartment. Drake Road is a boundary between the Walled Lake Consolidated and West Bloomfield school districts. Perry Rosen also was happy with 0- The Cohens moved three miles. Michigan Education Assessment Pleasant Lake Elementary, but swelling class sizes and the latest bond defeat in Program (MEAP) scores last year in basic February solidified her resolve to leave. subjects ranked Bloomfield Hills, Even though her 9-year-old son Ari had one Birmingham, West Bloomfield, Troy and year left in elementary school, she and her Lamphere students at the top. Walled Lake schools didn't make it on husband packed up the children and sold the house. In the fall, Ari and twins Emily the list of 11 school districts that received and Zachary, who are 6 1/2, will attend accreditation status from the state based Doherty Elementary in the West on MEAP scores. Per-pupil spending, however, varies Bloomfield School District. "There are five of us who came to Village widely between districts. According to the Department of Square, a few to Woodcliff, a few to Maple Creek. When my house was for sale, there Education, per-pupil spending in Walled were a lot for sale. Some people were ready Lake in the 1994/95 school year was to move, but I think (the bond issue failure) $6,951.75, compared to $7,385.33 in West Bloomfield. was the last straw," Mrs. Rosen said. Although the migration of families into In the past five years, the school-age pop- ulation in the Walled Lake schools grew by nearby subdivisions doesn't reach mass sta- about 2,000 students. The Oakland County tus, it is significant enough to be noticed by Development and Planning Division re- a few major developers in the county. Herman Frankel of the Herman Frankel ports the population of Walled Lake is 6,265 this year and is expected to grow to 8,217 Organization, the developer of Timber's by the year 2010, making the enclave one Edge, the Woodcliff properties, Village Square and Village Place, said he has made of the fastest growing in the county. Mark Mar, who with his wife Nori and a "tremendous number of sales from peo- three children moved from Timber's Edge ple moving across the line. "It's because of the school district," Mr. to Village Place four blocks away, said half the reason they left was heavy traffic on his Frankel said. "People in Walled Lake have been unwilling to fund the district. ... The old street. But he acknowledged that he and his mentality that exists in the Walled Lake family sought greener academic pastures School District is so different from the men- in the West Bloomfield School District, tality in West Bloomfield." • His daughter, Laurie Frankel, vice which has a reputation that exceeds Walled Lake's. PUDDLE JUMPERS page 8