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In late 2015, land was donated to the St. Bernard Parish School Board in Chalmette by the Meraux Foundation, and will be the future site of Arlene Meraux Elementary School. Formerly open schools [ edit ]
The St. Bernard Unified School was the K-12 public school in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana, United States, for the 2005-2006 school year after Hurricane Katrina hit the Parish directly on August 29, 2005. The school opened in mid-November 2005, less than three months after the devastating floods hit the parish, becoming the first school to open ...
Orleans Parish agreed to educate any secondary student from St. Bernard for a nominal annual fee paid by St. Bernard Parish School Board. The first high school in St. Bernard Parish was named Joseph Maumas High School and was located on Friscoville Street in Old Arabi. In 1947, with the construction of a new high school building in Arabi, the ...
Construction on the current parish complex began in 1962. Wauwatosa Catholic School, the elementary school on the grounds, was operated jointly by St. Bernard and St. Pius X parishes beginning in ...
The student body of nearly 200 dwindled to just 12 over the last 20 years, leaving the parish forced to close the school. St. Bernard School closes after teaching New Washington students since ...
Sabine Parish School Board; St. Bernard Parish Public Schools; St. Charles Parish Public School System; St. Helena Parish School System; St. James Parish Public Schools; St. John the Baptist Parish School Board; St. Landry Parish School Board; St. Martin Parish School Board; St. Mary Parish School Board; St. Tammany Parish Public Schools
The major changes in Peoria will include the closure of St. Bernard, which opened in 1903. It is the smallest of Peoria's Catholic parishes, with a Mass count of only 41 people, according to ...
Dean was a member of the St. Bernard Parish school board from 1981 to 1991, and led the St. Bernard Parish Council as president between 1992 and 1996. [2] He served on the Louisiana Senate from 1996 to 2004 as a Republican. He replaced Samuel B. Nunez Jr. in Senate district 1, and was succeeded in office by Walter Boasso.