After reconvening from a closed session, the Franklin County School Board certified compliance with Virginia open‑meeting requirements and then recorded three formal actions stemming from the confidential discussion.
The board voted to accept the principal’s discipline recommendation for a student identified in the minutes as “Student A.” The board later approved a motion allowing “Student B” to re‑enroll in the 2025–26 school year. Separately, the board voted to release two students from compulsory attendance for religious reasons.
Why it matters: School boards use closed sessions under Virginia law to discuss certain personnel and student disciplinary matters that are exempt from open‑meeting requirements. The board’s open‑session motions record only the formal outcomes; details of the closed session remain protected by law.
What the board did: The motions were made and seconded in open session and passed by voice vote. The clerk conducted a roll call certifying that, to the best of each member’s knowledge, only lawfully exempted matters were discussed during the closed meeting, as required by Virginia statute. The board did not disclose details of the discipline beyond accepting the principal’s recommendation.
Officials stressed compliance with state confidentiality rules for student matters and that the formal actions recorded in open session were the only public outcomes of the closed session.
Next steps: The board did not announce further public reporting about the closed session subjects. Any additional action would be handled according to applicable student‑privacy statutes and board policy.