SOUND OFF: Impending closure of KSA elementary art studio the wrong move
THERE IS A PARTICULAR KIND OF QUIET that settles over a room built for art. It’s not silence, exactly. It’s the hum of thinking, the scratch of pencil on paper, the low murmur of experimentation. It is the sound of children trying something new, failing safely, and trying again.
At Kamloops School of the Arts (KSA), that quiet has long had a home in the elementary art studio. At the end of this school year, that space will be gone. School administrators say arts programming will continue elsewhere, but this is inadequate. There simply aren’t other spaces that meet the needs of the program and aren’t already over capacity. Without a comparable alternative, vague reassurances are not enough.
Long before KSA existed, I was a school-aged kid sitting in early planning meetings about what an arts school in Kamloops could be. I remember the excitement, the sense of possibility. I wanted that kind of education so badly, a place where creativity was not an extra, but a foundation.
It didn’t come to be in time for me.


