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House Education committee reviews draft district and CISA maps, makes provisional boundary changes
Summary
On March 31 the House Education committee reviewed draft school-district and CISA maps, provisionally moving several Grand Isle island towns into the Chitten Central CISA and agreeing to fold the undersized District 26 into a neighboring district while asking staff to update the interactive maps for follow-up study groups.
The House Education committee met March 31 to review draft school-district and CISA (service-region) maps and made provisional boundary adjustments while directing staff to publish updated interactive maps for local study committees.
Committee members spent the session reconciling colored drafts on the big screen with the versions posted to the committee site and weighing whether to prioritize CISA (service region) lines or future school-district lines. The chair reiterated the maps are guidance, not fixed legal boundaries, and introduced John Adams, director of the Center for Geographic Information, to operate and update the interactive view.
Why it matters: CISA boundaries determine how shared services (special education, speech-language pathology, CTE coordination) would flow and shape which local boards meet in facilitated study conversations. Members said accurate…
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