Superintendent Butters praises community response after teacher's death, details grants and fundraising
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Superintendent Butters acknowledged a teacher's recent death at Bates Elementary, praised school and district staff response, said the district applied for a catalyst grant requesting $25 million and noted community fundraising efforts (Christmas Tree Jubilee raised about $611,000).
Superintendent Butters used the study session to offer condolences after the recent death of a Bates Elementary teacher and to highlight the district's community and staff response. He praised Principal Zach Cedar Hall, the student services team and district education leaders for their work wrapping supports around faculty and students.
Butters also reviewed recent fundraising and grant activity. A district official said the foundation's "Suffer Santa" luncheon raised more than $11,000 from district office donations; Hogan Construction donated $10,000 and the foundation matched $5,000, yielding just over $26,000 for teacher hardship grants. The district also reported that the 43rd Christmas Tree Jubilee raised approximately $611,000 this year, with nearly $161,000 designated for unified sports.
On grant-seeking, Butters said the district submitted an application for a 'catalyst program' grant and asked for $25,000,000 out of $65,000,000 available; he noted an additional $5,000,000 previously donated by Intermountain Health could be applied to the project. He said staff will update the board on any allocation later this month and provide a fuller briefing in February on the proposed campus-model project and staffing assumptions.
The superintendent framed the catalyst grant as an effort to create a cost-neutral campus model funded through the grant and existing district FTEs. The board did not take formal action on these items during the study session; they were presented as updates and staff direction to return with recommendations.
