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The quiet classrooms of a growing city: Why Surrey is losing its young families

If you walk through Surrey’s neighbourhoods, you see a city in the middle of a massive growth spurt. Cranes dot the skyline and new developments are reshaping the horizon. The narrative has long been that Surrey is the future — a booming, youthful alternative to Vancouver.

But inside the hallways of Surrey’s public schools, a different story is being told. For the first time in decades, the desks are beginning to empty.

A community in flux

The Surrey school district recently revealed that enrollment dropped by 1,450 students this past year, with nearly 900 more expected to vanish from the rolls this fall (1). While "smaller class sizes" may sound like a win on paper, in the world of public education, fewer students means fewer resources.

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Because provincial funding is tied directly to the number of students in seats, a shrinking head-count means a shrinking pool of support for the children who remain. As Trustee Terry Allen told the Vancouver Sun (2), this creates a "financial pressure" that ripples through every school library, music room and playground in the district.

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The exodus to the east

Why is a city that is supposedly "booming" losing its children? The answer lies in the harsh reality of the Lower Mainland’s housing market.

Simran Kang, the district’s director of finance, points to a demographic shift that should give every resident pause (3). Families aren't just moving to a different neighbourhood; they’re leaving the region entirely. Driven by a cost of living that has become unsustainable for many young parents, the "Surrey dream" is being packed into moving trucks and headed further east — out of the valley and, in many cases, out of the province.

When young families leave, a city loses more than just tax revenue. It loses the energy of the next generation, the volunteers for local sports leagues, and the vibrant, chaotic life that schools bring to a community.

The impact on the student experience

For the families who stay, the "uphill battle" described by Trustee Bob Holmes (4) becomes a daily reality. When the district has to balance its books against a funding model that doesn't account for inflation, the "extras" are often the first to go.

We’ve already seen the impact: reduced busing services that make the morning commute a hurdle for working parents, and a reduction in educational assistants who provide vital support to our most vulnerable learners. This isn't just about "rising costs." It's about a thinning of the safety net that public education is supposed to provide.

The district is currently providing more inclusive education than it is funded for, stretching every dollar and every staff member to the breaking point to ensure no child is left behind.

Shaping the future together

Surrey is at a crossroads. It’s becoming a city of towers, but we have to ask ourselves if it remains a city for families.

The school board is currently in the midst of public consultations before the final budget approval in May. This is a moment for residents to look beyond the balance sheets and advocate for the kind of community they want to live in. Whether you have a child in the system or not, the health of our schools is the most accurate pulse of our city’s future.

If we want Surrey to be more than just a place where people live, but a place where families thrive, we need to address why the hallways are getting quieter — before the silence becomes permanent.

Article sources

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Vancouver Sun (1, 2, 3, 4)

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Leslie Kennedy Senior Content Editor

Leslie Kennedy served as an editor at Thomson Reuters and for Star Media Group, followed by a number of years as a writer and editor and content manager in marketing communications, before returning to her editorial roots. She is a graduate of Humber College’s post-graduate journalism program and has been a professional writer and editor ever since.

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