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Manhattan District 114 Reviews Major Board Policy Overhaul

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Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education Meeting | April 29, 2026

Article Summary: The Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education conducted a first reading of a comprehensive overhaul of its board policy manual, which trims the document from 1,500 pages down to roughly 500 pages. The Board elected to delay final adoption until June to allow members to scrutinize specific changes regarding board governance and legal access.

Policy Overhaul Key Points:

  • The manual reduction was achieved by removing internal administrative procedures and exhibits from the public-facing document.

  • The district is adopting updates from the Illinois Association of School Boards (IASB) PRESS Plus issues 120 and 121.

  • Board President John Burke requested a specific review of Policy 2160 to ensure individual board members can access the board attorney without facing retaliation.

The Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education on Tuesday, April 29, 2026, held a first reading of a massive update to its policy manual, aiming to streamline district governance while catching up on a backlog of legal updates.

Over the past eight months, district administrators and the Board’s Policy Committee worked with a representative from the Illinois Association of School Boards (IASB) to audit the district’s entire 1,500-page policy manual. By stripping out internal administrative procedures and redundant exhibits—documents that legally do not need to be housed in the public board manual—the district has trimmed the text down to between 450 and 500 pages.

The Board is attempting to adopt a fully customized draft that integrates the IASB’s PRESS Plus quarterly updates, specifically issues 120 and 121. Moving forward, the district will subscribe to the PRESS Plus online service, allowing policies to be easily searchable online with active legal links.

However, the sheer volume of changes prompted Board President John Burke to request that the Board delay its final adoption vote until June. Burke specifically highlighted Policy 2160, which governs how board members access the district’s legal counsel.

Burke noted that during unprecedented situations in the past, the policy’s restrictive language was weaponized against board members. Previously, only the Superintendent or the Board President were clearly authorized to contact the attorney.

“Essentially some of us had to break policy in order to fix a problem, and then we were threatened to be booted from the board because we broke policy,” Burke stated. “If there is a legal concern that two or more board members have, I want it to be okay to seek counsel… I’d like to not put us in the same position ever again that we were in before.”

Administrators noted that the revised draft states the Board may authorize a specific member to confer with the attorney on its behalf, but agreed to flag the policy for further discussion in May before the final vote in June.

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