April 19, 2012
ADs likely to discuss public vs. private this weekend
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IT ISN'T LISTED as an official topic for discussion, but you can bet there will be some talk about - there it is again - public school/private school issues at the Charleston Marriott this weekend.

The West Virginia Athletic Directors Association conference, set for Saturday through Monday at the Marriott, is expected to draw 50 high school athletic directors from around the state, as well as 25 from middle schools.

The public school versus private school topic has been dragged through the court of public opinion ad nauseam in West Virginia over the last few years, and several attempts have been made by Class A public schools to rid their division of private school members, who they claim have an inherent advantage by not drawing students (and especially student-athletes) from specific attendance zones.

However, the issue does not appear to be going away and, in fact, is coming to a head in other states.

An article published Tuesday in the Charlotte Observer said that the 390 member schools in the North Carolina High School Athletic Association are voting this week on whether to expel parochial non-boarding schools. A three-fourths majority is required to change that group's constitution.

Private schools in North Carolina are already under additional requirements, as students who transfer there are ineligible for athletics for one year. But that measure isn't strong enough for some public school officials.

Several private schools in that state have won multiple championships in recent years, with Cardinal Gibbons in Raleigh capturing 34 titles since 2005.

The Observer article also mentioned that eight state associations around the country have adopted a multiplier rule for private school members since 2009, which multiplies their enrollments by an assigned number to determine their classification, in essence having them play against larger schools.

Some of the numbers cited are interesting. In Ohio, private schools make up 16 percent of that association's membership, but won 70 percent of the state titles. Georgia recently expanded from five divisions to six after non-public schools won 26 of 28 state championships (excluding football, wrestling and boys track) since 2008. In Indiana, private schools comprise 14 percent of the membership and won 40 percent of the titles.

West Virginia's Secondary School Activities Commission began admitting private schools in the early 1970s, but only recently have the rumblings of unfairness started.

Since 2000 in the state's three highest-profile sports - football, boys basketball and girls basketball - private schools have won 33 of 38 titles in Class A.

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