Elementary Schools
Your kids will likely attend one of two schools, depending on which part of The Creeks you're in and whether you choose public or Catholic education. Both are worth knowing well.
École Wascana Plains School is the public elementary serving most of The Creeks. It opened in 2017 and serves grades K through 8, which means your child stays in one building from kindergarten through middle school. That's a big advantage—fewer transitions, a consistent community for eight years. The school runs a French Immersion program as well as a regular English program, so if you're interested in bilingual education, you've got that option right in the neighbourhood. The building itself is relatively new, so you're not dealing with aging infrastructure or constant repair headaches.
St. Elizabeth School is the Catholic option. It's also K-8, also opened in 2017, and it serves The Creeks families who are registered with the Regina Catholic Schools system. If Catholic education is important to your family, this is your school. The building is modern, the programs are solid, and like Wascana Plains, you're getting eight years in one location. Enrollment is something to confirm with the school directly—Catholic schools do have registration requirements beyond just your address, so don't assume you're automatically in.
Here's what you should know: there's a major new school development coming to the area. The Towns neighbourhood (adjacent to The Creeks) and Greens on Gardiner are getting a joint-use school facility with a 1,400-student elementary building and a 2,000-student high school. The elementary will have 800 public spaces and 600 Catholic spaces, so families in The Creeks will have additional options once it opens. That facility will also have 180 licensed childcare spots, which is huge for working parents. Don't factor this into your decision today—timelines for school openings shift—but it's worth knowing that capacity is being added to the area.
High Schools
Once your kids finish grade 8, the high school question becomes real. The Creeks doesn't have a dedicated high school inside the neighbourhood, so your teenagers will be bussed or you'll be driving them. That's just how southeast Regina works.
Campbell Collegiate is the public high school most Creeks families use. It's about 10 minutes away by car, and it's a solid school with a strong reputation. They run an Advanced Placement program if your kid's headed toward university, and they've got French Immersion options too.
Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School is the Catholic option. Also 10-ish minutes away, strong academics, and if you've had your kids in the Catholic system through grade 8, this is a natural fit.
That new joint-use high school coming to The Towns area will give you another option down the road. Two thousand students is a big school, so it'll have more programming options, more sports teams, more clubs. But it's not open yet, so plan around Campbell and LeBoldus for now.
Childcare and Early Learning
I'll be honest with you straight away: Regina has a childcare shortage. If you're planning to put your child in daycare, get on waitlists now, even before you move. I'm not trying to scare you—lots of families make it work—but waitlists are real and they're long.
The Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre has an on-site childcare facility with about 90 licensed spaces. It's three minutes from The Creeks, so if you get a spot there, you're golden. Drop-off and pick-up are convenient, and the centre's connected to a facility where your kids can do swimming lessons and other activities. But again, waitlist.
The new joint-use school facility will add 180 childcare spots when it opens. That's meaningful. For now, though, you're looking at private daycare centres in the surrounding area or those 90 spaces at Sandra Schmirler. Ask me directly for a list of licensed providers nearby. Some operate in family homes, some are larger centres—each has trade-offs.
Family-Friendly Features
The Creeks itself is built with families in mind. The neighbourhood has over 12 acres of landscaped green space, two neighbourhood parks, and a network of walking paths. Separated sidewalks mean your kids aren't walking right next to car traffic. The environmental reserves give the area a quieter feel than some of Regina's busier neighbourhoods.
The Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre is the real hub for families in this area. It's got an indoor pool (which matters in Regina winters), a gym, a spray pad in summer, and programming for kids of all ages. The Sunrise Branch Library is inside the same building, so you can hit both in one trip.
Safety is something parents ask about, and I'll tell you honestly: The Creeks has below-city-average crime rates. It's a newer neighbourhood with families, good sightlines, and an active community.
You're also close to other family amenities. Downtown is 10 minutes away. The University of Regina and Wascana Park are nearby. The Acre 21 commercial area has Save-On-Foods, Shoppers Drug Mart, and restaurants—normal stuff you need regularly. None of it requires a 20-minute drive.
What Parents Should Know
Here are the things I'd tell a friend before they moved here.
Verify your catchment. The boundaries between Wascana Plains and other public schools can be confusing if you're not sure which part of The Creeks you're in. Use the school finder at reginapublicschools.ca. Don't assume based on the neighbourhood name. I've seen it go wrong.
Get on childcare waitlists before you close. Seriously. Call around the week you put an offer in. The 90 spaces at Sandra Schmirler fill up, and private options are competitive.
Registration for Catholic schools has steps beyond just your address. If you want St. Elizabeth or LeBoldus, talk to the school directly about registration requirements. You can't assume you're automatically in.
High school is a drive. If that matters to your family's logistics, plan for it now. Some families don't mind—some really do. Neither answer is wrong, but it's a real thing to factor in.
The area is still being built out. The Creeks is younger than some Regina neighbourhoods, and you'll see continued development. That can mean construction traffic some mornings, new families moving in regularly, and ongoing landscaping work. It's not permanent, but it's part of living here right now.
The schools and family life in The Creeks are solid. You're getting newer buildings, established programs, strong safety, and access to real leisure facilities. The tradeoff is that childcare is competitive and high school requires a commute. No rush, no pressure—but those are the facts as I see them.
If you want to talk through which school fits your family, or if you're ready to look at homes in The Creeks, I'll give you all the options. These are conversations I have all the time, and I'm here to help you figure it out.
Ready to explore? Check out available listings in The Creeks, read the Living In guide for The Creeks, or browse homes across east Regina. You might also want to compare with adjacent Greens on Gardiner.
