Mr. Curtis, presenting the district’s FSAT quarterly update, told the board that FSAT is the district’s school-safety program used with the state and that the state requires audits and quarterly reporting.
He reported that three schools were visited in the first quarter and that those inspections found no infractions. For the second quarter, he said the district had no schools visited. He said he was required to report those results and, if infractions had been found, to explain what corrective steps the district took.
Board members asked about monitoring and compliance. One board member asked whether the district has a system for self-monitoring; Mr. Curtis said the state requires spot inspections at every school at least once per school year, unannounced, where district staff must act like a state inspector to locate any infractions. The district then must address infractions through progressive discipline.
Mr. Curtis also described the role of school guardians, who walk campuses daily, identify similar infractions and report them to campus administrators for follow-up under district discipline policies.
No enforcement actions or specific corrective measures were reported because, according to the presenter, the inspections cited in the quarterly report found no infractions.