A staff member provided the board with an athletics update that focused on participation numbers and the distinction between club and fully funded school sports.
The staff member explained that club sports are typically volunteer-run pilot programs and are not funded at the same level as established school sports, which often include JV/varsity structures, stipend-paid coaches, busing and officials. The board was told two club sports piloted this year—flag football and alpine skiing—were run with volunteer coaches; flag football was largely intramural this year and had limited external competition. The staff member said club status is often used as a multi-year path before a sport becomes fully funded, and moving alpine skiing into a budgeted sport would require addressing busing, coach stipends and officials in the budget process.
Participation numbers read aloud in the report showed (as stated in the meeting) about 131 student-athlete entries in the fall (grades 5–8, including nonpublic students), 90 in winter and 63 in spring for grades 6–8; board members discussed whether those counts and service demands warrant budgeting for alpine skiing in the next fiscal cycle.
Board members asked clarifying questions about who competes against whom and whether club teams played other schools; the staff member said teams did compete against other teams and indicated that the board had approved the pilot status this year with the intent to revisit any funding decisions during the annual budget process.