Nevada Ed-Watch 9/26/19

The Ed-Watch series is designed to increase access to information on what decisions are being made regarding public education in Clark County and Nevada.


Clark County School District Board of Trustees 

What is the Board of Trustees & what are they responsible for? The CCSD Trustees are publicly elected decision-makers for the school district. They are responsible for providing oversight to the Superintendent and establishing District-wide policy. Trustees are accountable to work with their communities to improve student achievement.

Click here to learn more and see a list of current Trustees

Click here to Find your Trustee District

How often does the Board of Trustees meet? Trustees meet twice per month (second and fourth Thursdays) at 5pm at the Edward A. Greer Education Center (Board Room): 2832 E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, NV 89121.

Click here for a full list of Trustees meetings and agendas

Click here to visit Hope For Nevada’s #NVEd Calendar

Can community members engage at Trustee Meetings? Decision-making bodies benefit greatly from hearing public input and multiple perspectives. Community members can sign up to speak after the agenda has been posted– by calling the Board Office at (702) 799-1072 at least 3 hours before the scheduled meeting, or signing up in-person at the beginning of the meeting. Prior to each agenda item being voted on, speakers can share their perspective after the Board’s discussion and prior to the vote.


Thursday, September 26, 2019

Clark County School District Board of Trustees Meeting

Click here to see the meeting agenda

What happened at this meeting?

Public Comment

Members of the public provided testimony to Trustees regarding:

  • Concerns about students not getting enough physical activity, recess, and restroom breaks throughout the school day
  • Concerns about school safety and controlled access to school buildings
  • Appreciation for the district from a representative of the Education Support Employees Association (ESEA) for hearing support staff concerns while a Memorandum of Understanding was developed
  • Concerns about a student getting expelled for bringing foam toy nunchucks to school
  • Concerns about the process for hiring educators
  • Difficulty accessing pre-K for students who are not English Language Learners 
  • Concerns about a lack of training and professional development for support staff

Trustees Heard Updates on CCSD Focus 2024 Priorities

Below is a summary of the updates presented to Trustees related to the priorities of the CCSD strategic plan (Focus 2024).

Click here to see CCSD’s Focus 2024 online dashboard.

Teachers, Principals and Staff: Human Resources

  • Objective 1: Increase the percentage of licensed teachers in the classroom. 
    • Goal (2019-20): 100% 
    • Actual (2018-19): 95.4%
    • By 2024: 100%
  • Objective 2: Increase the number of qualified teachers recruited for the selection pool. 
    • Goal (2019-20): 3,649
    • Actual (2018-19): 3,098
    • By 2024: 3,649
  • Objective 3: Increase the percentage of Critical Labor Shortage support professionals hired and decrease the number of vacancies.
    • Goal (2019-20): 0
    • Actual (2018-19): 145
    • By 2024: 0

Click here to see the Human Resources presentation.

Members of the public provided testimony regarding funding for teacher pay and benefits to attract and retain teachers. Trustees discussed capturing teacher attrition data through an exit survey process. Trustees also discussed focusing on areas like school culture and professional development to support educator retention. 

Sound Fiscal Management: Out-of-Service Buses and Bus Driver Absenteeism

  • Objective 1: Reduce number of buses placed out-of-service to reduce service delays.
    • Goal (2019-20): 21%
    • Actual (2018-19): 19% 
    • By 2024: 3%
  • Objective 2: Reduce bus driver absenteeism to improve service to students and ensure full instructional minutes.
    • Goal (2019-20): 10%
    • Actual (2018-19): 14.3% 
    • By 2024: 8%

Click here to see the Bus Service & Driver Absenteeism presentation. 

Approaches to prevent chronic absenteeism of bus drivers included:

  • Recognizing employees quarterly for perfect attendance
  • Educating drivers and staff about how student achievement is impacted by their attendance.
  • To reduce driver absenteeism caused by health-related matters, the transportation department also implemented health and prevention initiatives, such as partnering with Medicine on the Move (over 118 transportation employees received treatment so far). 

Sound Fiscal Management: Purchasing

  • Objective 1: Decrease processing time, reduce costs, and increase the competitive procurement ratio. 
    • Goal (2019-20): 80%
    • Actual (2018-19): 91%
    • By 2024: 95%
  • Objective 2: Reduce requisition processing time by increasing SAP catalog utilization to 70% within the next five years.
    • Goal (2019-20): 60%
    • Actual (2018-19): 71%
    • By 2024: 70%

Click here to see the Purchasing presentation.

Trustees discussed direct, school-level purchasing versus centralized purchasing. Centralizing purchasing for the district tends to be more cost-effective.

Trustees Approved the Consent Agenda

Consent agenda highlights:

Trustees Heard a Presentation on the Eide Bailly Internal Controls Exam Report

A representative of Eide Bailly’s forensic department presented an overview of its report of CCSD’s Internal Controls examination. 

The primary examination method used was holding interviews with 409 CCSD employees within various business and finance units as well as some schools. 

Following the interviews, 13 recommendations were made for the district. 

Click here to see an executive summary outlining the 13 recommendations.

Click here to see the full report.

Trustees discussed staff training to ensure school-level compliance with updated policies and procedures. A request was made for Trustees to receive regular updates on each recommendation.

Trustees Heard a Presentation on Open Book Website

Open Book makes CCSD financial information easily accessible to the public. 

The Open Book website includes access to external audit results, the final budget of the fiscal year, and videos explaining topics related to the District’s finances. The site also has tools that show strategic budgets by school and accounts payable (payments to vendors).

There will be a Facebook Live video walk-through of Open Book on October 8th from 4:00-6:00 PM. 

Click here to see the presentation.

Click here to go to Open Book.

Trustees Approved a Memorandum of Agreement (MOU) Between CCSD and the Education Support Employees Association (ESEA)

One member of the public provided testimony in support of increased pay for support staff.

The agreement includes a 3% salary increase and a waiver for required fingerprinting costs.

The ESEA requested time to communicate the contract terms to the employees that will be impacted. Trustees approved the 2019-2021 MOU pending ratification. Once the ratification vote is made, it was requested that the pay increases be reflected in pay checks as soon as possible.

Click here to see the tentative agreement. 

Trustees Approved Changes to Food Service Programs Regulations

Trustees approved minor language updates to the Food Service Programs regulations. 

Click here to see the regulations.

Trustees Approved Changes to the School Facilities Naming Regulations (6-1 vote)

Trustees approved updates to the School Facilities Naming policy regulations. An eligible school that chooses to be renamed must conduct a survey of employees and families. At least 50% of the surveys must be returned, and greater than 50% of the surveys returned must agree to renaming the school.

Trustees approved the changes with a request for clarification that additional community input outside of the school community can be gathered for consideration, but will not be counted towards the 50% survey requirement. It was also requested to include examples of types of stakeholders that input could be gathered from. 

Click here to see the regulations.

Trustees Approved Changes to the 2021-2022 School Year Calendars for Students and Staff (5-2 vote)

The most significant change was related to how professional development is accounted for. Beginning in the 2016-2017 school year, schools were permitted to bank time for professional development in more flexible and frequent increments. Site-based collaboration was able to be banked and later utilized as time off during the week of Thanksgiving. This approach was approved by the Department of Education through the 2019-2020 school year. 

For the 2021-2022 school year, the Monday and Tuesday of Thanksgiving week are now in-school days, and there are four days spread out throughout the year that are dedicated to professional development.

Members of the public expressed concerns about:

  • Student absenteeism the week of Thanksgiving due to travel schedules
  • Students and staff having the full week of Thanksgiving dedicated to spending time with families.
  • A disproportionate amount of work days being taken away from 9-month support staff. 

Contingency days were also set for March 9th, April 13th, and May 21st. 

The calendar was informed by a committee consisting of over 25 stakeholders including principals, counselors, and other staff from other departments such as transportation and HR.

Click here to see the draft calendar for students and staff.

Trustees Approved Renaming Lomie G. Heard Elementary School, A Marzano Academy, to Lomie G. Heard Elementary School

The name change was to remove the “Marzano Academy” component of the name, since the school’s contract with Marzano is no longer active. 

Trustee Reports:

  • Trustee Wright hosted a Facebook Live parent meeting as a way to be more accessible to parents who cannot attend meetings at set times in person. 
  • Trustee Young announced an upcoming Cultural Food Festival for families in partnership with Vegas PBS this Fall. Additionally, October 18-19th is the Las Vegas Book Festival.
  • Trustee Ford holds monthly parent meetings and live stream videos on topics such as navigating meeting agendas. 
  • Cepeda announced that FAFSA releases on October 1st. 
  • NABSA strategic planning Friday and Sat to discuss collaboration throughout the stat and advocating for common sense policies.
  • Trustee Brooks served on a panel for Opportunity 180 that also included Superintendents Ebert and Jara, J.T. McWilliams Principal Womack, Caryne Shea from HOPE for Nevada– to talk about what it would take to make some systemic changes to focus on student outcomes. 
  • Trustee Young expressed concerns about 3 school principals that were removed for not meeting student growth benchmarks. 

Sign up to receive a notification when a new Ed-Watch post is published:

Nevada Ed Watch 6/27/19

The Ed-Watch series is designed to increase access to information on what decisions are being made regarding public education in Clark County and Nevada.


Clark County School District Board of Trustees 

What is the Board of Trustees & what are they responsible for? The CCSD Trustees are publicly elected decision-makers for the school district. They are responsible for providing oversight to the Superintendent and establishing District-wide policy. Trustees are accountable to work with their communities to improve student achievement.

Click here to learn more and see a list of current Trustees

Click here to Find your Trustee District

How often does the Board of Trustees meet? Trustees meet twice per month (second and fourth Thursdays) at 5pm at the Edward A. Greer Education Center (Board Room): 2832 E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, NV 89121.

Click here for a full list of Trustees meetings and agendas

Click here to visit Hope For Nevada’s #NVEd Calendar

Can community members engage at Trustee Meetings? Decision-making bodies benefit greatly from hearing public input and multiple perspectives. Community members can sign up to speak after the agenda has been posted– by calling the Board Office at (702) 799-1072 at least 3 hours before the scheduled meeting, or signing up in-person at the beginning of the meeting. Prior to each agenda item being voted on, speakers can share their perspective after the Board’s discussion and prior to the vote.


Thursday, June 27, 2019

Clark County School District Board of Trustees Meeting

Click here to see the meeting agenda

What happened at this meeting?

Public Comment

Members of the public provided testimony regarding the decision to eliminate the dean position in the Clark County School District.

Trustees Unanimously Approved the Consent Agenda

Consent agenda highlights:

  • Approval of a settlement for $500K (click here to read about this in the Las Vegas Review-Journal). 
  • Grant applications and Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs), including:
    • Immunize Nevada
    • NSHE participation in FAFSA
    • English Language Learner programs

Trustees Approved Members of the Sex Education Committee

The Sex Education Committee is charged with reviewing the content and materials to be used in units of instruction on the human reporductive system, STDs/STIs, and sexual responsibility. The committee also makes recommendations to the Superintendent, who then makes recommendations to Trustees. 

The approved committee members are:

  • Medicine/Nursing: Diane Elmore (District A)
  • Counseling: Laura Deitsch (District E)
  • Religion: Dr. S. S. Rogers (District C)
  • Teacher: Jessica Maleskey (District A)
  • Parents: 
    • Erin Bilbray Kohn (District F)
    • Jodi Thornley (District B)
    • Bonnie Pruneda (District B)
    • Stephanie Valdez (District E)
    • Stephanie Zinna (District G)
  • Pupil: Arianna Ophir (District E)

Trustees Heard Updates from the Superintendent

Superintendent Jara provided a presentation to Trustees about recent budget changes. In addition to the $17 million savings from the removal of the dean position– a total of $7.4 million dollars will be reduced from the 2019-2020 budget from the following departments:

  • College, Career, Equity and School Choice Office 
  • Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Unit 
  • Legal Services

Click here to see the presentation

Click here to read about this in the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Alternative options (in lieu of cutting the dean positions) were to eliminate:

  • Magnet programs
  • Performing arts
  • Athletics and athletic transportation
  • Transportation for secondary schools
  • Transportation for all students except those who the district is federally required to transport  

Superintendent Jara also provided information on school safety initiatives that will take effect following the removal of all dean positions. Student safety efforts for the 2019-2020 school years include:

  • 4 new canine officers 
  • An additional Resource Office for all high schools
  • A reserve officer program
  • Two staff training programs: Trauma 101 and De-escalation 

Additionally, two new student support positions have been introduced:

  1. Student Success Project Facilitator 
  2. Student Success Coordinator

These positions will be posted on June 28th, and principals can begin interviewing on July 3rd.

Trustees Approved Updates to CCSD Construction Bids Policy (7210) and the Purchasing Authority Policy (3311)

The construction bids policy addresses major differences that have occurred between construction bids and the final costs.

The following updates were made to the construction bids policy:

  • Changing the designee from Assistant Superintendent to the Chief of Facilities
  • Construction change orders cannot cumulatively exceed 3 percent of the original contract for new construction
  • Changes in services cannot cumulatively exceed 5% of the original contract.

Click here to see the policy.

Corresponding changes were made to the Purchasing Authority Policy

Board Approved Contract for COO and Chief of Staff

The new CCSD Chief Operating Officer is Michael Casey. Click here to see the contract. 

The new CCSD Chief of Staff is Christopher Bernier. Click here to see the contract.


Potential Future Agenda Items:

  • Feasibility of creating an Advisory Committee made up of in-school staff to advise the Superintendent.

Sign up to receive a notification when a new Ed-Watch post is published:

Nevada Ed-Watch 1/24/19

The Ed-Watch series is designed to increase access to information on what decisions are being made regarding public education in Clark County and Nevada.


Clark County School District Board of Trustees 

What is the Board of Trustees & what are they responsible for? The CCSD Trustees are publicly elected decision-makers for the school district. They are responsible for providing oversight to the Superintendent and establishing District-wide policy. Trustees are accountable to work with their communities to improve student achievement.

Click here to learn more and see a list of current Trustees

Click here to Find your Trustee District

How often does the Board of Trustees meet? Trustees meet twice per month (second and fourth Thursdays) at 5pm at the Edward A. Greer Education Center (Board Room): 2832 E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, NV 89121.

Click here for a full list of Trustees meetings and agendas

Click here to visit Hope For Nevada’s #NVEd Calendar

Can community members engage at Trustee Meetings? Decision-making bodies benefit greatly from hearing public input and multiple perspectives. Community members can sign up to speak after the agenda has been posted– by calling the Board Office at (702) 799-1072 at least 3 hours before the scheduled meeting, or signing up in-person at the beginning of the meeting. Prior to each agenda item being voted on, speakers can share their perspective after the Board’s discussion and prior to the vote.


Thursday, January 24, 2019

Clark County School District Board of Trustees Meeting

Click here to see the meeting agenda 

What happened at this meeting?

Public Comment

Members of the public provided testimony to Trustees regarding:

  • Furlough days for municipal support staff.
  • Concerns about students who are academically behind not getting enough support throughout the school year (so they don’t need to enroll in summer school).
  • Concerns about the graphic nature of a book included on high school student reading lists, and parents not being notified.  
  • Concerns about charter schools that are located nearby traditional district schools, and the effect on getting accurate enrollment counts.
  • Information related to the legislative session.

Trustees Unanimously Approve the Consent Agenda

The approved consent agenda included the following:

  • Submission of a grant application for STEM programs with Lockheed Martin ($1,040,5000).
  • Acceptance of other service agreements, grants of easement, and contract awards.
  • Acceptance of an annual report on charter schools that are authorized by CCSD. Click here to see the report.

Trustees Approve Occupation Education Scholarship

Trustees accepted $1,000 for the Board’s annual Susan Brager Occupational Education Scholarship.

Trustees Appoint Member to the Audit Committee

Trustees voted to re-appoint Joshua Robinson to the Audit Committee. His term will continue for 2-years, effective July 1, 2019 – June 30, 2020. There is one additional vacancy, and applications to fill one more appointment will open soon.

Trustees Approve Reconstitution of Low-Performing CCSD Authorized Charter Schools

Trustees voted unanimously on staff recommendations to reconstitute, including receivership, due to chronic low performance at two charter schools authorized by CCSD: 100 Academy of Excellence (Elementary School and Middle School) and The Delta Academy (Middle School and High School).

Once a receiver is selected for each school by the court, they will enter a 3-year turnaround plan. The reconstitution includes a receiver who will potentially replace the governing body.

If student achievement targets are met in 3-years, the school will be released to the governing body. If targets are not met, the receiver will either ask for an extension of time to continue to work with the school, or release the schools’ charter for final closure.

See communications between the two schools and CCSD:

  • Rebuttals & additional information from school Boards
      • Letter to CCSD from 100 Academy of Excellence
    • Letter to CCSD from The Delta Academy

See each schools performance data profile (2017-18):

Click here to read about this in the Las Vegas Review-Journal

Click here to see the Ed-Watch recap from the October 18th Trustees meeting, when accountability actions for low-performing CCSD charter schools were initially approved.

Trustees Hear an Update on the Budget

Trustees received a brief update from CCSD’s Chief Financial Officer regarding the 2019 amended final budget.

Click here to see the budget presentation.

Discussions Regarding Legislative Session:

Trustees Approve Positions on Potential 2019 Legislative Topics

Trustees accepted positions on topics that could arise in the 2019 Legislature.

Click here to see a draft CCSD legislative platform.

The legislative topic headlines are:

    • Rich and Rigorous Instruction
    • Increasing Human Capital
    • Efficient Operations and Finance
  • Improving Teacher Conditions

CCSD staff and lobbying firm (360 Strategies) worked with partner organizations like My Brother’s Keeper and the Safety Committee/Safety Taskforce to establish and align additional legislative priorities.

Trustees discussed Alternative Route to Licensure programs, and highlighted their appreciation for the inclusion of topics like restorative justice, clarification of the fingerprinting law, and class size reductions.

They also discussed Senate Bill 79 (filed by the Nevada Department of Education), which addresses how districts should approach chronic absenteeism. The Superintendent expressed concern about the role of the state regarding this issue.

Trustees also mentioned that the Sex Education Policy (Opt-in/Opt-out) was not included on the legislative platform. While Trustees each acknowledged the importance of this policy, it was identified that the board will stay neutral on the topic. However, if a particular bill  is filed, they will review and take a position.

Trustee Advocacy Guidelines During Legislative Session

Trustees were informed of guidelines to follow throughout the legislative session from General Council. The overarching theme was “The Board speaks as one voice.”

Acknowledging that legislators will want to hear from Trustees– when speaking individually, Trustees must stay within the parameters of what the Board has collectively discussed and voted on in their meetings. However, individual Board Members may advocate as a regular citizen, but must make clear that they are speaking on behalf of themselves, and not on behalf of the Board of Trustees.

Trustees Approve Annual 3-Year Program Pilot for Incentivizing Teachers at Target Schools

Trustees approved a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between CCSD and Clark County Educators Association (CCEA) that provides a $10,000/year salary supplement to teachers who are hired and begin working at targeted schools (listed below). Each of the targeted schools are 1-star middle schools.  

Trustees discussed challenges around getting teachers who are already employed at target schools to continue teaching there. They also discussed that while full details have not been established, this is a pilot program, and operations should not be micromanaged, since its outside of their purview as Trustees.  

    • J. Harold Brinley Middle School
    • Jerome Mack Middle School
    • Carroll Johnston Middle School
    • Mario C. and JoAnne Monaco Middle School
    • William Orr Middle School
    • Marvin M. Sedway Middle School
    • Ed Von Tobel Middle School
  • Preparatory Institute, School for Academic Excellence at Charles I. West (West Prep Middle School)

Click here to see the MOU.

Trustees and Superintendent Communication

Superintendent Jara clarified a comment he made at the State of the Schools address: “If we fix Clark, we fix the state.”

The clarification was that he did not mean this as an insult, and was referencing “sheer numbers.” He explained that Clark County’s population makes up 70% of the state, so if Clark County meets its academic and educational outcome goals, the entire state’s rating will improve.


Potential Future Items:

    • Streamline including opt-out policy & sex ed curriculum as an agenda item
    • Review of public comment laws– allowing public to provide input in new ways to get more feedback from people who are unable to attend in person
    • Information on CCSD’s early childhood education initiatives
    • SMRPC Debt Management Commission and appointment
    • Presentation about bullying and ways to address incidents
    • How data moves from charters through the Assessment, Accountability, Research, School Improvement (AARSI) department and then to the state
    • Support staff turnover numbers
  • Cultural competency training in schools and departments throughout the district in order to address the disproportionality of kids of color getting suspended, expelled, or being placed in behavior schools

Sign up to receive a notification when a new Ed-Watch post is published:

Nevada Ed-Watch 1/10/19

The Ed-Watch series is designed to increase access to information on what decisions are being made regarding public education in Clark County and Nevada.

Included below are recaps from both the CCSD Trustees work session on 1/9/19 and the CCSD Trustees board meeting on 1/10/19.


Clark County School District Board of Trustees 

What is the Board of Trustees & what are they responsible for? The CCSD Trustees are publicly elected decision-makers for the school district. They are responsible for providing oversight to the Superintendent and establishing District-wide policy. Trustees are accountable to work with their communities to improve student achievement.

Click here to learn more and see a list of current Trustees

Click here to Find your Trustee District

How often does the Board of Trustees meet? Trustees meet twice per month (second and fourth Thursdays) at 5pm at the Edward A. Greer Education Center (Board Room): 2832 E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, NV 89121.

Click here for a full list of Trustees meetings and agendas

Click here to visit Hope For Nevada’s #NVEd Calendar

Can community members engage at Trustee Meetings? Decision-making bodies benefit greatly from hearing public input and multiple perspectives. Community members can sign up to speak after the agenda has been posted– by calling the Board Office at (702) 799-1072 at least 3 hours before the scheduled meeting, or signing up in-person at the beginning of the meeting. Prior to each agenda item being voted on, speakers can share their perspective after the Board’s discussion and prior to the vote.


Wednesday, January 9, 2019
Clark County School District Board of Trustees Work Session

What happened at this work session?

Trustees Elect the Following New Board Officer Roles:

  • Trustee Brooks as Board President
  • Trustee Cavazos as Vice President
  • Trustee Garvey as Clerk

Presentation: Zoom, Victory, and SB178 Designated Schools

The presentation showed the academic outcomes at schools receiving special funding:

  • Zoom (for schools with high English Language Learner populations)
  • Victory (for underperforming schools located in high-poverty zip codes)
  • SB178 (schools rated 1- or 2-stars that are not getting Zoom or Victory funds)

Click here to see the full presentation.

You can also access data reports for Zoom,  Victory, and SB178 schools on Opportunity 180’s custom report builder.

Presentation: School Libraries

The presentation included literacy standards and the roles of librarians at the school site.

Click here to see the full presentation.


Thursday, January 10, 2019

Clark County School District Board of Trustees Meeting

Click here to see the meeting agenda 

What happened at this meeting?

Public Comment

Members of the public provided testimony to Trustees regarding:

  • Support staff working conditions
  • The inability to show the movie Schindler’s List to students in an 11th-grade history class because of a blanket policy not allowing movies rated PG-13 or above.

Trustees Unanimously Approve the Consent Agenda

The approved consent agenda included:

  • Grants:
    • Accepting grant funds from the Career & Technical State Allocation Grant through the Nevada Department of Education from Tesla.
    • Submitting grant application for Rural Schools through the Prevent Advocacy Choices Teamwork (PACT) Coalition, which provides resources to prevent substance abuse for all ages.
    • Submitting grant to State of Nevada for 2017-2018 Salary Incentives for Licensed Education Personnel. Click here to learn more.
  • Purchase Orders in the total amount of $1,259,160.75. This excludes two purchase orders totaling $30,000 for Data Insight Partners for having reached their $50,000 vendor maximum, per Board policy.

Trustees Hear Updates from the Attendance Zone Advisory Commission (AZAC)

The purpose of this board-appointed commission is to provide recommendations to the Superintendent of the Clark County School District concerning any necessary changes to attendance boundaries. Click here to learn more about AZAC.

AZAC’s chair shared an overview of the commission and their recent meeting updates:

  • The commission heard overwhelming concern from parents who say they are not getting information about the meetings and when they are happening. Trustees requested a review of how parents are informed.
  • Upcoming Community Input meetings:
    • 1/15/19 @ Chaparral High School, 6pm
    • 1/16/19 @ Spring Valley High School

More details can be found here.

Possible Next Step: Consider an AZAC update at the Trustee monthly meetings held in their districts.

Trustees Unanimously Approve Appointment of Dr. Linda Young to both the Southern Nevada Regional Planning Coalition and the Debt Management Commission

The Southern Nevada Regional Planning coalition meets once a month at the County office and discusses coordination on regional issues. The Debt Management Commission oversees any increases in taxation.

Trustees Discuss Updates to Trustee Travel & Expense Policy

Updates to the policy include:

  • During the development of the annual budget, the board executive assistant, in partnership with the Chief Financial Officer and board assistant, will calculate an annual travel allocation per Trustee.
  • During the legislative session, additional funds may be allocated for Trustee travel as it is an important part of the strategic plan.
  • Trustees can request per diem in advance of travel, instead of using a credit card.

In the discussion, some Trustees expressed concerns about the ability to “share” funds among trustees, accountability measures, and the requirement to have an original receipt.

The policy will be brought back for additional discussion during the February work session.

Click here to see the policy language.

Trustees Unanimously Approve Updates to Board Policy Review Process

The updates included minor grammatical corrections and language clean-up.

Click here to see the policy language.

Trustees Approve Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) Between Board of Regents and CCSD for strategic partnership for college and career readiness (6-0 vote, 1 abstention)

The strategic partnership will include collaboration on:

  • Addressing barriers to student participation
  • Developing options to expand access to career & technical education for students
  • Increasing dual credit opportunities that will allow high school students to earn both high school and college credit.
  • Aligning high school English language arts and math curriculum to Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) standards

Click here to see the memo.

Trustee Cepeda abstained from the vote because of her employment with Nevada State College, but expressed full support of the partnership. In the discussion, Trustees raised questions about whether there are conflicts with Nevada Department of Education standards, and requested data to track the impact of the partnership.

Presentation: Council of Great City Schools’ Review of Clark County School District Operational Services

Dr. Michael Casserly (Executive Director) and colleagues from Council of Great City Schools presented the findings of their recent assessment of current district operational practices. The Council of Great City Schools review team included operational team members from a variety of member districts across the country.

Highlighted Commendation: Even with a history of salary and longevity freezes, many support staff members interviewed maintain a “can-do” and “caring” attitude toward their work.

Highlighted Challenge: There appears to be a culture in the district of relying on out-of-date practices with no apparent sense of urgency to bring it into the 21st century and generate needed change.

The report includes 20 total recommendations to address its findings.

Click here to see the full report.

During public comment, members of the public expressed concern that the recommendations in the report are not in line with AB469 (district reorganization), and concerns over staff treatment, which may lead to inaccurate findings.

Discussion: Operational Services Review Report Findings

Trustees thanked the Council of Great City Schools for their work and praised the value of the report. The discussion between Trustees and the Council of Great City Schools regarding the report included the following:

Concerns expressed included:

  • A clear data integrity issue with data identified in the report
  • Buildings meeting Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) requirements but not paying to receive formal certification.
  • Consistent communication issues across departments and missed management opportunities
  • A theme around reactive practice vs. proactive practice
  • The effects of budget cuts on efforts to address challenges

Opportunities identified included:

  • A comparison of CCSD to only the largest member Districts to see best practices and systems.
  • Leveraging reports like these as an opportunity to improve systems and processes, and to help the district take an honest look into its practices.
  • The report provides a roadmap for what challenges to focus on addressing.
    • Council of Great City Schools recommends cross-referencing with the “Gibson Report” from 10 years ago.

Click here to read about this in the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Authorization for Principals to Fulfill Responsibilities Without the Purchase of Services from the District

The conversation on this item included concerns over potential displacement of existing staff.  Staff noted that any services not transferred as of this Board meeting will not be included in the January 15th strategic budget that will be sent to school principals.

Trustees Unanimously Approved the following Responsibilities to be transferred to school-level authorization:

  • High school credit recovery
  • Moapa Valley Farms
  • Prime 6 field trips
  • ELL Student Success Advocates

Trustees requested more information on the following services before they are transferred:

  • English Language Learner placement testing
  • FACES support services
  • Landscape maintenance

Presentation: Cultural Competency Professional Learning Within CCSD

Trustees had questions about the long-term vision of the work, and Nevada Department of Education liaisons training the trainers.

Trustees also requested information on the training’s impact on student achievement.

Click here to see the full presentation.


Potential Future Items:

  • Attendance Zone Advisory Commission meeting outreach
  • Film ratings allowed to be shown in school
  • Details on support staff separations

Sign up to receive a notification when a new Ed-Watch post is published: