On Nov. 17 the Williamson County Board approved 2026–27 and 2027–28 calendars, advanced textbook-selection policy language changes (including ex officio clarifications), adopted board norms and approved the superintendent evaluation instrument; votes on routine business were largely unanimous.
The Williamson County Board adopted revised policy 6.312 on Nov. 17, 2025, requiring the district to develop a secure-storage procedure for student devices during the school day while permitting students in grades 9–12 to access devices during assigned lunch periods. The measure passed 10–2 and becomes effective Aug. 1, 2026.
The board approved a five-year capital improvement plan and voted 12–0 to move a $17 million intent-to-fund request for a new Split Lock middle school one year earlier in the plan. Superintendent Jason Golden said the district will use zoning and enrollment projections and then request county intent-to-fund decisions as appropriate.
The Williamson County Board of Education approved budget amendments, policy readings and governance items at its Oct. 20 meeting; major financial votes included $3.184 million for buses and a $12.465 million salary transfer.
The Williamson County Board of Education on Oct. 20 voted 11'0 to advance a stricter wireless-communication-device policy on first reading and approved an amendment to delay the policy's implementation until Aug. 1, 2026.
Public commenters told the Williamson County Board of Education that the board's rejection of a committee textbook choice undermined teacher expertise and asked for stronger oath/conflict provisions; the board approved a textbook committee and advanced policy 4.401 on first reading (12'0).
At an organizational meeting presided over by Superintendent Jason Golden, the Williamson County Schools Board unanimously elected Josh Brown as board chair for 2025–26 and Claire Reeves as vice chair by voice votes.
The Williamson County Schools Board approved several budget and policy items by voice votes, including a $855,618 school-security grant, a $10,234,529.93 carryover for the Innovative School Models grant to fund an innovation hub, multiple charter- and safety-related policy updates, and the 2026–27 budget calendar and committee memberships.
Superintendent Jason Golden said a Williamson County Schools teacher was suspended without pay pending an investigation after a reported social-media post about the killing of Charlie Kirk, and the board heard public comment both defending and condemning the employee.
The Williamson County Board of Education approved consent-agenda items, budget carryovers, a $7,068,763.50 state-funded teacher bonus distribution and several administrative actions at its Aug. 18 meeting, with roll-call tallies recorded as 9–0 on the listed items.