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Plymouth‑Canton board approves routine agenda items, Canton High robotics furniture and names Wayne election representative

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Summary

The Plymouth‑Canton Community Schools board adopted its meeting agenda and several resolutions, including final approval of furniture and equipment for Canton High School’s Innovation Hub — Robotics Edition, and appointed a Wayne Reiser election representative with an alternate. All recorded votes were unanimous.

The Plymouth‑Canton Community Schools Board of Education unanimously approved several routine agenda items and resolutions during its evening meeting, including final purchase approval for furniture and equipment for Canton High School’s Innovation Hub — Robotics Edition.

The actions were taken during the board’s regular meeting after the agenda and consent items were moved and seconded. The board voted 6‑0 to adopt the meeting agenda and the consent agenda, which included personnel transactions, minutes and a set of policies and resolutions listed on the consent calendar.

The board then considered a final reading and vote on bid package HS‑4a for the Canton High School Innovation Hub — Robotics Edition. Treasurer Patrick Kehoe moved the resolution and Trustee An Ahmed seconded; the motion passed 6‑0. No further amendments or roll calls were recorded in the transcript.

The board also approved a resolution designating a local district representative for the Wayne Reiser electoral body and named Treasurer Kehoe as the alternate. That amended resolution was moved and approved by a unanimous vote. Finally, the board approved a resolution to participate in a local district vote on the Wayne Reiser budget (action item 25‑05‑77); that motion also passed 6‑0.

The board did not vote on two first‑reading items presented later in the meeting — a first reading to purchase replacement security cameras for CTE areas at PSEP and a first reading on a proposed high‑school course about artificial intelligence. Those items remained at first reading for later consideration.

The board’s unanimous votes followed the routine meeting cadence: motions were made, a second was recorded, and roll calls were not read aloud but outcomes were announced as “motion carries” with the 6‑0 tally.

The board meeting continued with committee reports, administrative presentations and an extended public comment period in which parents, staff and community members raised topics that included school culture at Bentley Elementary, library materials, bullying and safety.