Board approves bond resolution, multiple RFP awards and ordinance waivers; adult‑school reductions authorized
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The board approved dissolution of two community facilities districts (Mello‑Roos waivers), a resolution to issue refunding bonds, multiple RFP contract awards, and a resolution to reduce adult‑school classified positions; motions carried after routine votes with no public opposition.
The Fairfield‑Suisun Unified School District governing board approved several action items in a single meeting cycle, including waivers of first reading for two ordinances to dissolve community facilities districts and a resolution authorizing refunding bonds.
Key approvals and votes at a glance:
- Appointment ratifications: Julia Rumm (associate mental health clinician, effective 2026‑03‑02), Vang Lor (transportation leadership role), Nicole Harris (assistant principal, Mary Bird Early Childhood Center), and Jaren Jourdain (assistant principal, after‑school programs). All appointments were affirmed by unanimous vote.
- Ordinance waivers: The board moved to waive first readings and advanced Ordinance No. 47‑2526 and Ordinance No. 48‑2526 to dissolve Community Facilities Districts related to local Mello‑Roos financing; motions to waive the readings were approved.
- Bond resolution: The board approved Resolution No. 49‑2526 authorizing the issuance and sale of refunding bonds to adjust debt related to district facilities; members described the action as positive for taxpayers and facilities.
- RFP awards and program approvals: The board approved awards for several RFPs including technology equipment to CDW Government LLC and STEM, performing arts and sports camp contracts (Galileo Learning LLC; Forxa Academy; Olympians Inspire/Thrive Forward). Each motion was moved, seconded, and carried with aye votes.
- Personnel action: Resolution 50325‑2526 was approved to reduce certain classified positions at the adult school (4.6 FTE representing 12 part‑time employees in childcare and adult student worker categories) due to funding uncertainty; the district indicated it would work to reassign affected staff where possible.
Most motions passed with unanimous or near‑unanimous aye votes; the board recorded student board member preferential votes on eligible items. No public speakers opposed any action items during the meeting.
