A prolonged exchange at the June 1 work session centered on a request from board member Melanie Freeman for a comprehensive district bathroom policy. Freeman said bathrooms can be locations for vaping, bullying and social-media-driven misconduct and urged public input and a policy solution. “Bathrooms are probably the one place that kids know they can go to and misbehave and nobody can catch them,” Freeman said.
District leaders responded that school administrators already address misconduct under the student code of conduct and that discipline data do not show a spike in restroom incidents. Multiple administrators and the superintendent said the district tracks referral location and that restroom-related referrals accounted for roughly 2% of disciplinary incidents this year and last. Staff described existing tools: electronic hall‑pass logging, camera coverage in hallways (not in restrooms), targeted staff monitoring during transition times, and school-specific supervisory practices (for example, scheduled group bathroom breaks supervised by teachers in some middle schools).
Board members were split on next steps. Some called for more transparency and district-provided data about incident locations and school-level bathroom-supervision practices; others cautioned against creating a new policy that might duplicate existing discipline codes and principal-level operational practices. No motion was made to send a bathroom-policy draft to the policy committee; staff said they would provide the requested discipline-location data and noted that principals already review trends through the district data team.
Why it matters: The exchange reflects a tension between community perceptions and district discipline data and raises questions about when a new centralized policy is appropriate versus leaving operational decisions to building leadership.