6.22.2026 Fall River School Committee - Special Education, Alternative Education & Early Childhood

Jun 22, 2026 YouTube Report Issue

The Fall River School Committee's Special Education, Alternative Education & Early Childhood Subcommittee met on June 22, 2026, to discuss several key initiatives. The committee reviewed proposed staggered start and end times for the Evolve Academy (7:55 AM - 2:50 PM), Ascend Virtual School (9:00 AM - 3:30 PM), and the newly designed RPA (10:30 AM - 5:25 PM). After discussion regarding the timing of the agenda item's release and the need for full committee approval, the item was referred to the full committee on a 2-1 vote. A proposal to align Evolve Academy's graduation requirements to a minimum of 80 credits was also discussed and referred on a 2-1 vote, with Mr. Das dissenting on both items due to concerns about late agenda modifications. The subcommittee unanimously supported referring several contracts and proposals to the full committee. This included renewing the Cartwheel contract for telehealth counseling, requesting 151-200 seats at a district cost of $97,500, and approving a new contract for "The Regulated Classroom," a framework aimed at helping PreK-2 students with self-regulation. A job description for a Lead BCBA, a position with a $4,000 stipend that was previously negotiated, was also referred for approval. The committee also reviewed a request to seek agency staffing to fill 141 current special education vacancies, referring it to the full committee to expedite the hiring process. Two significant expansion proposals were presented. The first was a request to conduct a feasibility study for a new public day school at the PACE building, aimed at serving students with level three autism and medically fragile conditions currently in costly out-of-district placements. The second was a proposal to expand the Stone Therapeutic Day School by adding four new classrooms over two years to accommodate up to 32 more students, which would also generate revenue by accepting tuition-in students from neighboring districts. Both proposals, which aim to bring students back to the district and create significant cost savings, were unanimously referred to the full committee for further discussion.

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