Tag: Tacoma Public Schools

  • Maritime 253 Opens This Fall: Inside the New Tacoma Public Schools Pipeline to the Waterfront Workforce

    Maritime 253 Opens This Fall: Inside the New Tacoma Public Schools Pipeline to the Waterfront Workforce

    While the headlines this spring went to levy results and the district’s recurring budget gap, the most consequential thing happening in Tacoma’s public school system right now is being built on a strip of Port-owned land across the Foss Waterway from downtown. This fall, Tacoma Public Schools opens Maritime 253, a regional skills center designed to do one thing that should make every employer on the Tideflats pay attention: turn local 16- and 17-year-olds into a homegrown maritime workforce.

    For a region where the ports are the economic engine, this is not a nice-to-have. It is infrastructure. Here is what Maritime 253 is, who can enroll, why it matters to the businesses that hire here, and where it stands as of June 2026.

    What Maritime 253 Actually Is

    Maritime 253 is a Career and Technical Education (CTE) skills center, not a high school. That distinction matters. Students stay enrolled at their home high school and spend roughly half their day at the center, attending either a morning or an afternoon session, according to the program’s enrollment page. They earn credit toward graduation while training on industry equipment and, in many tracks, stacking up industry-recognized credentials and dual college credit.

    The model is built around three features that lower the barrier to entry:

    • It is free. Courses are offered at no cost to students, per Tacoma Public Schools.
    • It is regional. The center draws students from across the South Sound, not just from Tacoma.
    • It is targeted. Coursework is advanced and geared toward juniors and seniors (grades 11 and 12) who are ready to move toward the workforce, an apprenticeship, or a two- or four-year program.

    The permanent building sits at 1225 Maritime Center Drive in Tacoma, on the east side of the Foss Waterway just south of the Murray Morgan (11th Street) Bridge. It opens to students in the fall of 2026.

    The Four Pathways

    When the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) granted the skills center conditional approval, Maritime 253 organized its training around four focus areas, according to the program’s published timeline:

    Advanced Manufacturing

    Hands-on training in the fabrication, machining, and production skills that feed shipbuilding, repair, and the broader industrial base in Frederickson, the Tideflats, and beyond.

    Maritime Operations, Transportation, and Logistics

    The supply-chain backbone of the ports: warehouse logistics, transportation, and the credentialing that gets a young person onto a working waterfront.

    Marine Science and Technology

    The technology-and-innovation track, including emerging fields like unmanned vehicles that the maritime sector is rapidly adopting.

    Maritime Sustainability

    Training aligned with the decarbonization and environmental work that increasingly defines port operations across Puget Sound.

    These are not abstractions. Before the permanent building broke ground, Maritime 253 ran pilot programming that gave students access to a Merchant Mariner Credential, warehouse logistics, an electrical interim credential, forklift certification, plumbing and pipefitting, unmanned vehicles, and wildland fire training, according to the program timeline. The summer 2025 session alone served roughly 300 students across partner districts, many of them earning dual credit and industry-recognized credentials.

    Who Can Enroll

    Maritime 253 is a member-district consortium. Students from these eight districts have guaranteed seats, per the enrollment information:

    • Tacoma Public Schools
    • Franklin Pierce School District
    • University Place School District
    • Fife Public Schools
    • Sumner-Bonney Lake School District
    • Orting School District
    • Vashon Island School District
    • Chief Leschi Schools

    Students from non-member districts can still enroll if space is available, with a signed shared-student agreement. Enrollment for the 2026-27 school year opened on November 3, 2025, and families apply by completing an enrollment questionnaire to start the process. For employers and economic-development watchers, the member list is itself a signal: this is a coordinated regional bet, not a single-district experiment.

    The Business Case: Why a High School Program Belongs in the Tacoma Business Journal

    The reason Maritime 253 earns coverage on a business beat is the size of the economy it is feeding. The ports are not a side industry here. According to a July 2025 economic-impact analysis, the Port of Tacoma’s lines of business, combined with cargo operations in the South Harbor of The Northwest Seaport Alliance, supported 41,095 jobs in 2023. Those workers earned a combined $3.4 billion in total compensation, and the businesses generated nearly $10.8 billion in revenue.

    Zoom out to the full gateway, and the numbers get larger. The same analysis found that the Ports of Tacoma and Seattle together with The Northwest Seaport Alliance supported more than 265,000 jobs in 2023, generating $17.7 billion in wages and benefits and nearly $55 billion in business output. In a state where roughly 40 percent of jobs are tied to trade, the maritime workforce is not a niche labor pool. It is a foundation.

    The challenge every operator in that ecosystem knows is succession. Longshore workers, marine technicians, logistics coordinators, welders, and electricians age out, and the pipeline replacing them has historically run through word of mouth, the military, and out-of-area recruiting. Maritime 253 is an attempt to build that pipeline locally and deliberately, starting in the junior year of high school. For a Pierce County employer, the math is straightforward: a 17-year-old with a forklift certification and a Merchant Mariner Credential is a candidate you can hire and develop, not one you have to import.

    The Building, the Money, and the Timeline

    Maritime 253 is one half of a larger project. The Port of Tacoma and Tacoma Public Schools broke ground on the combined Port Maritime Center on January 8, 2025. The Port’s side is a roughly 60,000-square-foot, two-and-a-half-story business office that will house approximately 150 employees of the Port of Tacoma and The Northwest Seaport Alliance, according to the Port of Tacoma. That office is slated to open in spring 2027, after the school side.

    The funding structure is worth noting for anyone tracking how public projects get built here: the Port and the school district ran their own design processes and are each funding the construction of their respective buildings. In June 2025, the Port also secured a $2 million EPA brownfields grant tied to the site, which has the industrial history common to working waterfront land.

    The leaders behind it have framed it as civic infrastructure. At the groundbreaking, Port Commission President John McCarthy called the Port Maritime Center “the new front door to the Port of Tacoma, allowing us to better connect with the community.” Tacoma Public Schools Board President Korey Strozier said the project is “shaping the future of maritime in our region and opening doors for more young people to step into an industry.” Tacoma Mayor Victoria Woodards described it as “a gateway for our students, connecting them to hands-on, career-focused education in the maritime industry,” according to the Port’s announcement.

    What It Means for Families and Employers

    For families weighing where to live and where to send their kids, Maritime 253 adds a genuinely differentiated option to the Pierce County education menu. Most regions sell their schools on test scores and AP offerings. Tacoma can now point to a tuition-free, employer-connected path that ends with a credential and a job in a $55 billion gateway, available to a junior at Lincoln, Wilson, Franklin Pierce, or Fife alike.

    For employers, the value is recruitment and retention. A homegrown worker who trained two miles from the dock is statistically more likely to stay than one recruited from out of state. And for the broader Tacoma business community, Maritime 253 is a tangible answer to a question that has dogged Pacific Northwest ports for years: where will the next generation of maritime labor come from? Starting this fall, part of the answer has a Tacoma address.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When does Maritime 253 open?

    The permanent skills center at 1225 Maritime Center Drive in Tacoma opens to students in the fall of 2026. Programs have already been running at interim sites since the 2025-26 school year, and summer sessions served roughly 300 students in 2025.

    How much does Maritime 253 cost students?

    Nothing. Courses are offered at no cost to enrolled students, according to Tacoma Public Schools. Students remain enrolled at their home high school and attend a morning or afternoon session at the center.

    Which school districts can send students to Maritime 253?

    Eight member districts have guaranteed seats: Tacoma Public Schools, Franklin Pierce, University Place, Fife, Sumner-Bonney Lake, Orting, Vashon Island, and Chief Leschi Schools. Students from non-member districts may enroll if space is available with a signed shared-student agreement.

    What can students study at Maritime 253?

    The center is organized around four focus areas: Advanced Manufacturing; Maritime Operations, Transportation, and Logistics; Marine Science and Technology; and Maritime Sustainability. Past offerings have included a Merchant Mariner Credential, forklift certification, warehouse logistics, electrical and plumbing pathways, and unmanned vehicle training.

    Who is building Maritime 253 and how is it funded?

    It is a partnership between the Port of Tacoma and Tacoma Public Schools, built on Port-owned land across from downtown Tacoma. The two organizations ran separate design processes and are each funding the construction of their respective buildings. The Port also secured a $2 million EPA brownfields grant for the site in June 2025.


  • Tacoma Public Schools: Enrollment, Graduation Rates, Bond Measures, and Standout Programs

    Tacoma Public Schools: Enrollment, Graduation Rates, Bond Measures, and Standout Programs

    The District at a Glance

    Tacoma Public Schools is Pierce County’s largest school district, serving approximately 28,000-30,000 students across 60+ schools (elementary, middle, and high school levels). It’s the third-largest district in Washington State behind Seattle and Spokane. The district operates within Tacoma city limits and serves a student population that reflects the city’s demographic diversity — approximately 35% white, 20% Hispanic/Latino, 15% Black, 12% Asian/Pacific Islander, 10% multiracial, and 8% other backgrounds.

    For families considering Tacoma, the school district is often the first research topic. This article covers what the data actually shows — not the marketing version and not the complaint-thread version, but the measurable performance and structural realities.

    Enrollment Trends

    Like most urban districts in Washington State, Tacoma Public Schools experienced enrollment decline during and immediately after the pandemic. The district lost approximately 2,000-3,000 students between 2019 and 2022, with partial recovery since. Current enrollment hovers around 28,000-29,000 depending on the school year and count date.

    The enrollment loss was not evenly distributed. Elementary schools in higher-income neighborhoods (North End, Stadium District) maintained enrollment better than schools in south and east Tacoma. Some of the lost students went to private schools, some to neighboring districts (University Place, Puyallup), and some represent families who left Pierce County entirely during the post-pandemic housing churn.

    The district’s response has included school consolidation discussions (controversial and ongoing), increased marketing of magnet and choice programs, and investment in the programs that do attract and retain families.

    Graduation Rates

    Per Washington State OSPI data, Tacoma Public Schools’ four-year graduation rate has improved steadily over the past decade. Recent rates hover in the 82-86% range — above the state average for large urban districts but below some surrounding suburban districts (Puyallup, University Place).

    The graduation rate varies significantly by high school. Schools like Stadium High School and Wilson High School typically report rates in the high 80s to low 90s. Schools serving higher-poverty populations have lower rates but have shown improvement trends.

    The district has invested heavily in dropout prevention and credit recovery programs. The Tacoma Whole Child initiative — a framework addressing student mental health, basic needs, and family support alongside academics — is credited with some of the graduation rate improvement.

    Bond Measures and Facilities

    Tacoma Public Schools has passed several significant bond measures in recent years to address aging facilities. The district’s building stock ranges from 1900s-era structures (some still in use) to modern buildings completed within the last decade.

    Recent bond investments have funded: new or renovated elementary schools, seismic upgrades to older buildings (Tacoma sits in earthquake country), technology infrastructure, and athletic facility improvements. The capital program runs in the hundreds of millions across multi-year bond cycles.

    The political reality: bond measures require 60% voter approval in Washington State (for school construction bonds). Tacoma voters have generally supported these measures, reflecting community willingness to invest in school facilities even when other aspects of district performance generate criticism.

    Standout Programs

    Science and Math Institute (SAMI) at Stadium High School — A competitive-admission STEM magnet program housed within Stadium High School. Students complete a rigorous science/math curriculum with research opportunities. SAMI students consistently represent at regional and state science competitions.

    School of the Arts (SOTA) at Wilson High School — An arts-focused program within Wilson High School offering concentrated study in visual arts, performing arts, and media arts alongside standard academics. Audition-based admission.

    International Baccalaureate (IB) Programme — Lincoln High School hosts a full IB Diploma Programme, offering an internationally recognized curriculum for students seeking college preparation beyond standard AP courses.

    Career and Technical Education (CTE) — The district has expanded CTE pathways significantly, including partnerships with Tacoma Community College for dual-credit offerings. Programs include healthcare, construction trades, IT/cybersecurity, and manufacturing — directly tied to Pierce County’s employment sectors.

    Early College High School / Running Start — Multiple high schools facilitate Running Start enrollment at Tacoma Community College, allowing juniors and seniors to earn college credit (free tuition for state-funded credits) while completing high school requirements.

    What Families Should Know

    Tacoma Public Schools is a large urban district with all the variation that implies. The experience at a high-performing North End elementary school is substantively different from the experience at an under-resourced south Tacoma school — same district, different realities. Families choosing based on district-level statistics will miss this variation.

    The choice/open enrollment system allows families to apply to schools outside their attendance area, though transportation is not provided for choice transfers. This means families with cars and schedule flexibility have more options than those without — an equity issue the district acknowledges but hasn’t fully resolved.

    For families moving to Tacoma: research individual schools, not just the district. Use the OSPI Report Card for school-level data. Visit during school hours if possible. Talk to current parent communities. The quality variation within the district is larger than the variation between districts in Pierce County.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How many students attend Tacoma Public Schools?

    Approximately 28,000-30,000 students across 60+ schools, making it Pierce County’s largest district and the third-largest in Washington State. The student population is demographically diverse, reflecting Tacoma’s overall population.

    What is the graduation rate for Tacoma Public Schools?

    The district’s four-year graduation rate is in the 82-86% range based on recent OSPI data — above average for large urban districts in Washington but below some surrounding suburban districts. Rates vary significantly by individual high school.

    Does Tacoma have magnet or specialized high school programs?

    Yes. SAMI (Science and Math Institute) at Stadium High School is a competitive-admission STEM program. SOTA (School of the Arts) at Wilson is an audition-based arts program. Lincoln High School offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. Multiple schools offer CTE career pathways.

    Can you choose which school your child attends in Tacoma?

    Yes. Tacoma Public Schools has an open enrollment / school choice system allowing families to apply to schools outside their attendance area. Admission to choice schools depends on available space. Transportation is not provided for choice transfers — families must arrange their own transport.

    Are Tacoma Public Schools better or worse than Puyallup or University Place schools?

    Tacoma has more variation within the district than the difference between district averages suggests. Top-performing Tacoma schools compare favorably to suburban districts. Lower-performing schools lag behind. District-level comparisons mask this internal range. Individual school research is more informative than district-vs-district comparison.