Local Control Accountability Plan Overview for 2025-26 School Year
The official document
What the district published
This is the source material — exactly as released by RUSD. The plain English translation below is this site's version, written for community members who shouldn't need a budget degree to understand where their school dollars go.
Original PDF coming soon — check reedschools.org for the source document.
In plain English
What this document actually says
This overview presents Reed Union School District's second year of a three-year state-required plan focusing on two main goals: academic achievement and social-emotional well-being. The district's $33.08 million budget allocates $753,582 to LCAP actions, with $372,772 specifically dedicated to high-needs students (socioeconomically disadvantaged, English learners, foster/homeless youth, and students with disabilities). Key academic outcomes show 76% of students met or exceeded ELA standards and 75% met math standards in 2023-24. Attendance rates reached 95% with suspension/expulsion rates under 1%. The plan includes eight action categories per goal, incorporating stakeholder feedback from surveys, advisory committees, and community meetings requesting more tutoring, professional development, student leadership opportunities, and family communication.
What this means for your family
Your child will benefit from increased tutoring support, new instructional coaching, intervention programs, and social-emotional learning. The district is investing over $750,000 in programs based on parent and student feedback, including after-school academic support, student leadership opportunities, enrichment activities, and better family-school communication about student progress. Special focus is placed on supporting students with disabilities, English learners, and economically disadvantaged students.
Summaries are AI-assisted and based on the original district document shown above. Nothing has been editorialized — interpretations are clearly labeled. This site is maintained by Lina Godfrey's campaign as a community resource.