District proposes unified communications policy to centralize messaging and protect student data

Cache County School District Board of Education · March 6, 2026

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Summary

A district presenter proposed an umbrella communications policy to centralize official messaging, require approved accounts, restrict which staff can issue district-wide emergency messages, and create a searchable portal of approved external tools to limit student-data exposure.

A district communications presenter outlined a proposed umbrella policy March 5 that would consolidate social-media and website guidelines, centralize official district messaging and emphasize data privacy and access controls for external tools.

The presenter said the policy will clarify who may speak for the district, require approved accounts for official district and school platforms, and create procedures for distribution of third-party materials so the district does not inadvertently advertise or share vendors' links that collect student data. As an example of the stakes involved, the presenter cited a recent California enforcement action in which a tech firm was fined for improperly selling student data; the presenter used that example to explain why a searchable portal of approved apps and links is needed.

Key elements described include assigning the superintendent and the public-information officer as the only authorized initiators of districtwide emergency broadcasts, implementing a single approved platform for two-way messaging with parents and coaches, formal procedures to approve school and district accounts, and training and documentation for administrators and staff on data and ADA-accessibility requirements.

The presenter said implementation will require substantial staff time and training and that parts of the policy will be rolled out over months; a draft procedure for distributing external materials is expected within about six weeks. The board asked clarifying questions about approved-account exceptions, brand identity (district vs. school logos) and how principals should handle local communications; the presenter said guidance will spell out when school-level materials need district branding and when they do not.

No formal vote was taken; staff said they will return with procedures, training timelines and implementation plans for board review.