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Board approves 2025–26 student code of conduct; officials warn pending state bills could require changes

June 17, 2025 | ECTOR COUNTY ISD, School Districts, Texas


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Board approves 2025–26 student code of conduct; officials warn pending state bills could require changes
The Ector County Independent School District board approved the 2025–26 student code of conduct on June 17; district staff said there are no changes in the code for the coming year as presented, but noted possible near‑term changes if the state enacts new laws.

Why it matters: State-level changes could require rapid policy updates and wide family notification; student-discipline and cell‑phone rules are among the issues discussed.

The presentation noted that the student code of conduct for 2025–26 contains no changes at this time. A separate handout in the trustee packet lists revisions to student handbook fees. Staff reminded trustees that principals work with families to address financial needs when fees create barriers.

District staff told trustees several bills awaiting the governor’s signature could affect local discipline practice. Examples discussed included rules affecting how the district disciplines students in pre‑K through second grade and legislative changes regulating cell phones (their storage and location during the school day and consequences when students do not comply). Staff said the effective date for signed bills would allow about 90 days for the district to adopt new policies and procedures and that the district will communicate changes to parents and students when final guidance is available.

Board members emphasized the need for a clear communication plan, especially for high‑school students, and staff agreed to notify parents and stakeholders promptly if the governor signs legislation that changes requirements. The board approved the code of conduct and the revised fees by voice vote.

What’s next: If the governor signs the pending legislation, district staff will return with recommended policy updates and a communications plan for parents and campuses.

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