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Board approves negotiated teachers' contract, HR actions and routine fiscal measures

Loveland City Board of Education · March 18, 2026

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Summary

The Loveland City Board of Education approved a multiyear agreement with the Loveland Education Association, multiple personnel actions including a new middle-school principal, and a set of routine fiscal measures and contracts during its March meeting.

The Loveland City Board of Education approved several routine and substantive items at its March meeting, including a negotiated agreement with the Loveland Education Association and a slate of personnel and financial measures.

The board voted to approve the negotiated agreement with the Loveland Education Association covering July 1, 2026, through June 30, 2029. Superintendent Mr. Broadwater said negotiations concluded professionally and thanked Greg Kroskey, president of the association, and Kristen Sherman for their work. The board approved the agreement by roll call.

On personnel matters the board approved retirements and resignations and accepted employment recommendations. The agenda named Pam Wallace (special education aide) and Barb Orsinelli (physical education teacher) as retirees and noted principal David Knapp’s departure to Mason City Schools. The board approved appointment of Amanda Robinson as the new Loveland Middle School principal; Robinson briefly addressed the board after the vote.

Financial and operational approvals included acceptance of February financial reports, an amended permanent appropriation certificate, authorization to pay PACE Schools electronic payment processing fees and ratify prior payments, and approval of contracts for facility use, Chromebook refreshes, and membership in a purchasing consortium. The treasurer reported moving $3 million into commercial paper as a hedge and noted the district received the ASBO International Certificate of Excellence in Financial Reporting.

The board also approved overnight student trips (choir to Nashville; yearbook to San Diego), acceptance of donations (including athletic donations supporting locker-room renovations), several piloted student placements, disposal of surplus items, and establishment of 200 fund accounts for seventh- and eighth-grade teams to simplify fundraising accounting.

Most motions passed by roll call without extended debate. The meeting adjourned after routine closing business.