MUNCIE — Muncie Community Schools is operating more schools than eight out of nine other districts of comparable size, a review by The Star Press found.

Faced with the threat of a state takeover of MCS, the Muncie school board voted in an emergency session last week to close three of its 14 schools. That would bring the corporation more in line with districts its size.

Republican state lawmakers have targeted financially unstable MCS for failing to "right size" or align the number of its schools with enrollment declines — a crisis that legislators noticed "didn't happen overnight."

REWIND: What do state lawmakers have to say about Muncie schools?

Closing three schools would leave Muncie with more schools than Concord, Plainfield, Duneland and Marion; the same number of schools as Huntington, and fewer schools than Anderson, Michigan City, Kokomo and Valparaiso.

The number of schools operated by each of those nine districts ranges from seven to 14 (see our full comparison at bottom). Like Muncie, four of the nine districts have at least two middle schools — Michigan City, Huntington, Kokomo, and Valparaiso. Muncie and Kokomo both operate the most schools: 14.  All of the comparison schools operate only one high school, Muncie kept two high schools until 2014-15.

After MCS closes Mitchell, Storer and Sutton elementary schools, it will be left with the "right number of schools," at least for the time being, Superintendent Steve Baule told The Star Press. The school board did not accept his recommendation to also close Northside Middle School.

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