At the policy portion of the meeting the board reviewed proposed language for a district fraud policy and discussed amendments to the public‑comment policy.
Staff noted the fraud policy (policy 828) is standard PSBA language that defines fraud, describes reporting requirements and delegates enforcement duties to the superintendent. Directors emphasized the importance of staff awareness and the ability of the board to request a forensic audit if circumstances warrant, noting the district must maintain such policies to remain compliant while receiving federal funds.
Board members then examined a PSBA‑recommended update to policy 903 governing public comment and board members’ remarks. The discussion covered who counts as an authorized speaker for organizations, whether employees may speak about bargaining‑stage contract matters, sign‑in and recording procedures, and a commonly used three‑minute limit per statement. Directors agreed the presiding officer should have discretion to limit or terminate a comment that becomes personal or disruptive, and that the board president may be overruled by a majority of directors on contested rulings.
Members also discussed committee meeting practice, concluding that committees should decide whether to hold a first public‑comment period and that committee reports will be captured in board minutes even if full committee minutes are not produced. On signage, members preferred to rely on the presiding officer’s judgment rather than reinserting a broad 'no signs' ban.