A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Governance committee advances reading-policy compliance, approves public‑comment and board‑norm changes; discusses student protest and safe‑schools measures

February 06, 2026 | St. Louis City, School Districts, Missouri


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Governance committee advances reading-policy compliance, approves public‑comment and board‑norm changes; discusses student protest and safe‑schools measures
At its Feb. 5 meeting, the St. Louis Public Schools governance committee advanced several policy items and approved two to be moved forward for full board consideration.

Dr. Daniel presented Policy IGAB, an MSBA model policy on instructional interventions and reading success plans that the legislature requires districts to adopt. "This is the MSBA model policy that meets all of the letter of the law," he told the committee, adding that SLPS has been implementing reading success plans in practice but had not adopted a formal policy. The committee voted to recommend IGAB to the full board for final approval.

The committee also approved updates to the district’s public comment policy (4.2) by voice vote and moved forward updated board norms, which added language about safety, ethical conduct and online behavior.

Members discussed a student protest or student‑voice policy (referred to as policy 4.3). Kim Dutch, general counsel, reminded members that legal considerations around the First Amendment and related exceptions must guide any policy drafting; the administration plans to survey other districts, vet stakeholder input and return with draft options.

The chair read aloud a "Safe Schools" resolution affirming that SLPS will not deny admission or participation in district programs based on immigration status and directing that any immigration‑enforcement requests be processed through the superintendent’s office. Committee members asked administration to ensure the procedures that implement the resolution are readily accessible on the district website and to report back with an update at the next governance meeting.

Several members also asked administration to outline a clearer definition of "transparency" and recommended the district consider a media‑relations or public‑relations policy or a scheduled policy‑review cadence; staff agreed to return with options for the committee to consider.

Don't Miss a Word: See the Full Meeting!

Go beyond summaries. Unlock every video, transcript, and key insight with a Founder Membership.

Get instant access to full meeting videos
Search and clip any phrase from complete transcripts
Receive AI-powered summaries & custom alerts
Enjoy lifetime, unrestricted access to government data
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee