Superintendent staff reported completion of the Comprehensive Development Plan for the 2026 school year, provided enrollment projections (Mr. Davis named as contact), noted updates to policy 09.36/procedure form 221, and referenced released KSA performance data with a detailed report in the packet.
At a Jan. 7 special call meeting, attendees approved the agenda, multiple sets of minutes, consent items and personnel reports by 4-0 votes. Several motions named specific movers and seconders; personnel reports listed retirements and resignations for board review.
The presiding speaker moved the board into executive session citing KRS 61.810 for deliberations on acquisition/sale of real property, proposed or pending litigation, and personnel hearings; a motion by miss Hundley, seconded by mister Springer, passed 4-0.
A presenter invited board members to visit East to experience a canceled-in-December 'East showcase' in person, demonstrating classes such as space science, pottery, civil engineering and other innovative elective offerings; the presenter asked members to attend individually or in pairs to avoid acting as a board.
Students and school leaders described a new on-campus resource offering essentials and confidential support; presenters said community partners and student volunteers already have donated goods and organized more than 4,000 nonperishable items into family kits.
Students and school leaders described a new on-campus resource offering essentials and confidential support; presenters said community partners and student volunteers already have donated goods and organized more than 4,000 nonperishable items into family kits.
Trustees approved a change to the district's telecommunication policy allowing teachers to designate locations for student cell phones, then voted to enter executive session citing KRS provisions on property, litigation and personnel.
The district's treasurer reported a sharp rise in cash from recent bond-sale proceeds and a large property-tax payment; trustees approved the treasurer's report unanimously and were directed to review detailed fund reports.
At a special meeting Oct. 8, the Oldham County School Board voted unanimously to reject Lifewise Academy’s application to provide moral instruction during the school day, citing logistics, lost instructional time and liability concerns and noting recent changes to KRS 158.200.
The Oldham County Board of Education approved a financing plan authorizing the sale of roughly $109 million in local bonds to fund the South Oldham High School project; the bond sale was scheduled for the next day with closing set for Oct. 14.