The board approved consent and financial agendas, certified substantial completion for Sunset Hill Elementary, tabled one business item, approved the 2025–26 estimate of needs, entered and exited executive session, approved the superintendent's 2025–26 contract, and approved employment schedules with one name removed.
District leaders reported that opening Sunset Hill shifted hundreds of elementary students, the district is down roughly 40 elementary students year-over-year but continues enrollment through October 1, and high‑school blended/0‑hour options have altered class-size patterns with concerns noted in high‑school math.
The district rolled out its own fiber network, added access-control doors and upgraded cameras, and outlined device inventories and monitoring tools — including LineWise and ClassWise — with plans to roll out 1,100 staff laptops and replace aging classroom panels.
Quick summary of motions the Mustang Public Schools Board approved in open session, including consent agendas, negotiated agreements, personnel schedules, adjunct teacher list, teacher empowerment grant, fleet vehicles and accreditation change.
The board approved terms to close on a property at 322 West State Highway 152 and granted a permanent easement to the City of Mustang for a 16‑inch water line alignment; the easement was presented as having no impact on the Lycoma area.
The board approved new Policy 10‑94 to add nondiscrimination language addressing antisemitism and Policy 21‑31 establishing parameters for artificial intelligence system and tool use in district operations and instruction.
The Mustang Public Schools Board voted to implement the teacher empowerment grant for the 2025–26 school year after a public comment from a teacher who urged the board to postpone and raised questions about who the grant benefits and how evaluations will be standardized.
Administrators outlined a new bell schedule adding a 0 hour, expanded open-campus lunch for juniors and seniors, a narrowed set of concurrent-university partners, changes to course sequencing, and a plan to hold 2026 graduation at Bronco Stadium with backups.
The board approved routine consent items, financial reports, employment recommendations and the purchase of a used City of Mustang police vehicle for the safety and security director; several employment schedules were approved after board questions.
District staff said 15 students previously served in two autism-specific classrooms housed at a single site will be transitioned to their home schools with added behavior interventionists, paraprofessionals and monitoring; staff noted IEP-team meetings and continued individualized services.