The superintendent reported that Mecklenburg County Public Schools opened the 2025 school year with few operational disruptions but said the division is responding to an active cyberattack that has limited access to some systems. The superintendent told the Board of Supervisors the incident is under investigation by state and federal agencies and is being handled with the county's insurance carrier.
The revelation came during a routine opening-of-school update that summarized custodial, transportation and instructional preparations. The superintendent said roughly 3,840 students were enrolled across elementary, middle and high schools as of the figures cited at the meeting and that first-day enrollments were within historical variance.
School officials said custodial staff prepared buildings, transportation staff reworked hundreds of bus routes and teachers and administrators held new-staff orientations and two-day open-house sessions for families. The superintendent praised staff for reverting to paper-based and manual processes where needed, saying "our teachers, students, and staff have risen to the challenge by going old school with instruction and operations."
On the cybersecurity matter, the superintendent said the division "has been a victim of the cyber security incident," that it remains a crime under active investigation, and that they cannot discuss operational details publicly because of the ongoing investigation. The superintendent credited the technology team, led by Josh Kempner and Ron Goodman, with working nights and weekends to restore services and noted the county had cyber insurance with an insurer named during the meeting.
School leaders said the division is coordinating with state and federal investigators and the county's insurer to restore affected systems. No formal board action regarding the incident was recorded at the meeting.
Local context: officials said the staffing and logistics work that prepared schools for the start of the year — including moving Clarksville Elementary into its new building and interim moves for Chase City Elementary while demolition and abatement proceed — reduced the operational impact of the outage.
Looking ahead, administrators said they will provide updates to the board and continue to work with external investigators and the county's insurance carrier to return systems to normal.