Several parents and district employees used the public‑comment portion of the meeting to press the board on two emotionally charged topics: (1) a request to amend board policy JP so deceased students' names can be read aloud at commencement by family opt‑in, and (2) concerns from teachers about possible elimination or reduction of voluntary early retirement (VERP) and health reimbursement arrangement (HRA) conversions of unused sick days.
Amber Hartzick asked the board to amend policy JP (adopted Feb. 5, 2026) to include an opt‑in option allowing the names of deceased students to be read aloud during graduation ceremonies and asked the board to implement that change by May 16. Hartzick said petitioners collected nearly 4,000 signatures in a matter of days and cited national bereavement guidance recommending naming deceased students during ceremonies.
Multiple staff members and teachers described the retirement-benefit issue as an immediate financial threat. Librarian Karen Bishop said eliminating the HRA conversion benefit would push many longtime educators to postpone retirement or use paid time off; she cited modeling suggesting district savings when a portion of retirees take VERP but said shifting costs to employees would be inequitable. Teacher Kylie Michaud said the change could reduce her retirement resources by roughly $87,000 and urged more than one year's notice before any termination of benefits.
Nick Craley and other speakers framed their comments in union and solidarity terms, urged continued advocacy for full special-education funding at the state level, and asked the board to consider how benefit changes would affect classroom staffing and substitute costs if experienced staff delay retirement or begin to use paid time off.
Board members responded in the topics-for-discussion section. Several members expressed sympathy and acknowledged the deep pain behind the public comments while defending the February committee process that produced policy JP; one board member said the committee was deliberately inclusive and that the policy was crafted with input from principals and grieving parents. Superintendent Yeager said the administration had included potential retirement-benefit changes in a negotiated-agreement notice this year to be transparent, and reminded the public the board must still follow negotiated-agreement and statutory processes.
Separately, the board unanimously approved procedural business during the meeting: adoption of the agenda, consent agenda items 6.01–6.13, bids/contracts 7.01–7.15 (including a change order related to the Innovation Campus), and grant-related items including a Head Start continuation grant for FY2026–2027 and IDEA LEA assurances, all by recorded voice votes (each recorded as 6–0).
Ending: The board moved into executive session to discuss employer–employee negotiations later in the evening. The superintendent will provide a fuller presentation on legislative impacts at the June meeting.