The Siren School District board reviewed a draft policy addressing damage to district property and whether families should be charged to repair or replace items.
Staff said this formal policy had not previously been approved; multiple board members noted the handbook already references some fines for lost or damaged textbooks and asked the district to cross-reference existing rules, including the Chromebook policy. Members pressed for clearly defined procedures: when law enforcement should be called to document damage, whether contractor estimates would be required, how depreciation is handled and whether a payment plan would be offered for large sums.
Several board members urged consistent application and protections for students with disabilities. One committee member recommended a clear cap: 'these costs will not exceed the cost of the damage and repair,' to avoid arbitrary charges. Members also discussed whether some incidents require formal reporting and whether charges should be tied explicitly to documented repair estimates.
Why it matters: board members said consistent policy language will protect families and staff and help avoid ad hoc or uneven enforcement. The board asked staff to revise the draft to cross-reference related policies, clarify documentation and payment procedures, and return it for further consideration.
Next step: staff will revise the draft policy with specific cross-references (for example, the Chromebook policy), include a clear method for documenting and estimating repair costs and propose language addressing students with disabilities and payment plans.