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Clarence Central School District · Board of EducationSix Red Devils, an 81% budget, and an AI policy on deck
CMS Auditorium · Monday, June 8, 2026 YEAR-END
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Clarence Board of Education·June 8, 2026

Recognitions · Year-End Budget · Summer Capital Work · AI Policy First Read

A Year Ends in Thank-Yous, and a Look at the Summer Ahead

In a 47-minute year-end meeting, the Clarence Board of Education spent nearly half its time honoring six staff members and a departing student representative through its monthly Red Devil Recognitions, then turned to business: Superintendent Dr. Matthew Frahm[*] reported the 2026–27 budget passed at 81%—the highest passing rate among Erie 1 BOCES districts—and previewed a summer of brickwork, HVAC, and parking-lot capital projects across the district; the board approved its full slate of year-end finance and personnel items, including borrowing authority of up to $994,808 for buses; and it took a first read of a new Artificial Intelligence policy while adopting a Title I parent-engagement policy early to meet a grant deadline.

The Board's Favorite Thing: Six Red Devils Honored

Before any resolution was read, the board did what its president and superintendent both called the part they look forward to most each month. "There may be the board's favorite thing each month," Dr. Frahm told the room, introducing the Red Devil Recognitions—a segment in which staff are nominated, most often by the parents of the children they teach, and called to the stage to have those nominations read aloud.

Six were honored, five of them drawn from a single building. Dr. Frahm asked the audience to notice a pattern as he read: how many of the nominations turned on a teacher meeting the needs of a child with an individualized education program. "It really is striking," he said, "and it's a point of pride for our district." Honored were kindergarten teacher Sonya Cieslewicz[*] and first-grade teacher Julie Knubbert[*], both of Ledgeview Elementary; speech therapist Sara Kreher[*]; middle-school teacher Jessica Mohr[*]; music teacher Amanda Witherell[*]; and Ledgeview special-education teacher Andrea Heard.

The nominations were, by design, personal. One parent of a kindergartner with an IEP described scanning the first week of school "for things that could go wrong," then exhaling in the second week upon realizing her daughter was "completely safe and sound under her wing." Another credited a first-grade teacher with turning a child anxious about reading into one caught "with a flashlight after she should be in bed." A third, the parents of a child who has struggled to communicate since birth, said that "today we are hearing and seeing Logan's beautiful voice, something two years ago we thought wouldn't be possible." Reading one aloud, Dr. Frahm paused: "I'm tearing up just reading that."

The board then turned to its outgoing student representative, Avery Collins[*], a softball player headed to Michigan State, thanking her for a year of bringing the student perspective "into our discussions." Her parting gift drew the evening's one knowing laugh: a sweatshirt, the board noted, that was meant to be Michigan State—but "it is a Michigan Wolverine sweatshirt" that "was sent to Michigan State."

In the Room
  • The segment: Red Devil Recognitions, the board's monthly staff/student honor (Red Devils is the district mascot).
  • Honored: six staff (five from Ledgeview Elementary) plus the departing student rep.
  • How chosen: nominated, most often by parents; nominations read aloud at the table.
  • The thread: Dr. Frahm flagged how many nominations cited support for students with IEPs.
  • Time spent: roughly the first half of a 47-minute meeting.
"There may be the board's favorite thing each month."Superintendent Dr. Matthew Frahm[*], opening the recognitions[1]
"It is a Michigan Wolverine sweatshirt. It was sent to Michigan State."The board, on its parting gift to a Michigan State–bound student rep[1]
81% and a Summer of Brickwork: The Year-End Update

With the recognitions done, Dr. Frahm delivered the year's closing "Looking Ahead Together" update, opening with the spring's budget vote. The 2026–27 spending plan passed with an 81% approval rate, which he said was the highest passing rate of all Erie 1 BOCES districts—down slightly from last year's 83%, a figure he noted had been the district's highest in 50 years. Voters also returned three incumbent trustees—Cindy Magera[*], Tricia Andrews[*], and Dawn Snyder[*]—to the seven-member board.

The bulk of the update looked past June. Dr. Frahm walked through summer priorities department by department: curriculum writing and new-teacher onboarding (a three-day August orientation overseen with mentoring lead Gretchen Rowe), a hiring season he called unusually busy, a district phone-system replacement and wireless upgrades from the technology office, and a multi-year capital project. This summer's construction is, in his words, "fairly basic in nature"—brickwork, HVAC, and septic-system work, plus bus-loop and parking work at the middle school and the east side of the high school front loop, with the high school's west side and Sheridan Hill parking to follow next summer. The district also runs a 12-month extended school year for eligible students; the elementary program will be housed at Ledgeview, with Mr. Picaccio[*] as principal.

An AI Policy on Deck—and a Title I Policy Adopted Early

The meeting's most forward-looking item drew almost no debate, because it was not yet up for a vote. Under Board Development, the board took a first read of Policy #5840, Artificial Intelligence (item B12), together with companion district guidelines for AI use—the policy-committee chair singled it out as the one to study before next month, when adoption is expected. It was one of a dozen policies on the docket, eleven of them first reads held over for review.

The exception was Policy #8260, Title I Parent and Family Engagement (item B1), which the board adopted on the spot rather than holding for a second reading. Dr. Frahm explained the urgency: the district is a recipient of federal grant funds and must satisfy a reviewer's compliance recommendations—one of which was to adopt the revised policy—by the end of the school year. He credited Dr. Overholt[*] and her team with the grant work behind it.

Why Adopt One Policy but Only "First-Read" Eleven Others?

School boards normally take a policy through a "first read" at one meeting and adopt it at the next—a built-in pause for review and public awareness. On June 8 the board followed that pattern for eleven policies (the AI policy among them), holding each for a later vote. But it broke the pattern for one, Policy 8260, adopting it the same night. The reason was a deadline, not a shortcut: a federal grant review required the revised Title I policy to be on the books by the end of the school year. So a single item jumped the queue while the rest wait their turn next month—a small illustration of how outside funding rules shape a board's calendar.

Year-End Housekeeping: Reserves, Buses, Hires, and 192 Students Served

The balance of the meeting moved quickly through the year-end ledger. On the finance side, the board approved items F1 through F13 in a single motion—accepting April financials, paying bills, and making the annual fundings of its retirement, employee-benefit, and capital reserve funds—and reviewed F14, a draft agenda for July's reorganizational meeting. Among the resolutions was authority to borrow up to $994,808 in serial bonds for bus purchases, backed by a bus proposition voters approved in May, 865 to 239.

On personnel, presented by Mr. Michele[*], the board approved instructional items P1–P11 and non-instructional items P12–P15, covering resignations, leaves, tenure appointments, and a long roster of summer and substitute positions. The slate included seven new teachers; one of them, Mia Gennaro, was present and invited to meet the board. Finally, Ms. Shiska[*] reported for Student Support Services that the Committee on Special Education had met for 23 days and recommended services for 182 students, while the Committee on Preschool Special Education met three days for 10 students—192 in all. The board approved both reports and adjourned.

All Motions — Click Any Row to Expand

Actions are by voice vote ("All those in favor? Aye"), not roll call, so individual member positions are generally not recorded. All seven members were present ("I believe we're all here"). First names used in the audio are mapped to the verified roster; movers/seconders below reflect the first names heard.

1 Approve Agenda — June 8, 2026 regular meeting Passed

Routine approval of the evening's agenda.

Moved: Cindy Magera[*] · Second: Dennis Priore[*] · Voice vote, carried

2 Approve Minutes — May 11, 2026 meeting + executive session Passed

Approval of the prior meeting's minutes and the executive-session minutes.

Moved: Tricia Andrews[*] · Second: Michael Fuchs[*] ("Mike") · Voice vote, carried

3 Finance F1–F13 — financials, bills, reserve fundings, bus borrowing Passed

Single motion approving F1 (April financials), F2 (bills/warrant), F3 (cooperative bidding resolution), F4–F5 (payment and budget-transfer authority), F6 (approval of May vote results), F7 (up to $994,808 serial-bond borrowing for buses), F8 (bid results), and F9–F13 (annual fundings of the ERS, TRS, employee-benefit/accrued-liability, and capital reserve funds; setting the July reorganizational meeting date). F14, a reorganizational-meeting draft, was informational only.

Moved: Dennis Priore[*] · Second: Dawn Snyder[*] · Voice vote, carried

4 Personnel P1–P11 — instructional (incl. 7 new teachers, tenure) Passed

Instructional personnel: resignations, leaves, prior/substitute appointments, seven new-teacher appointments, summer and ESY positions, notification of tenure appointments (P9), and presentation compensation (P10). Presented by Mr. Michele[*]; new teacher Mia Gennaro present.

Moved: James Boglioli[*] (president) · Second: Cindy Magera[*] · Voice vote, carried

5 Personnel P12–P15 — non-instructional appointments & resignations Passed

Non-instructional: a retirement-date amendment, four resignations, prior appointments, buildings-and-grounds and aide positions, clerical and summer positions, substitutes. (P16, an increase in hours, was informational; P17, a director-agreements resolution, was noted.) The motion as read covered P12–P15.

Second: Michael Fuchs[*] ("Mike") · Voice vote, carried

6 Student Support Services S1–S2 — CSE & CPSE reports Passed

Approval of recommended services: Committee on Special Education (met 23 days, 182 students) and Committee on Preschool Special Education (met 3 days, 10 students). Presented by Ms. Shiska[*].

Moved: Cindy Magera[*] · Second: Adrienne Costello-Sulik[*] ("Adrian") · Voice vote, carried

7 Adopt Policy #8260 — Title I Parent & Family Engagement (B1) Adopted

Adopted on first read—skipping the usual second-reading wait—to meet a federal grant-compliance deadline before the end of the school year. The other eleven policies on the docket (B2–B12, including the Artificial Intelligence policy #5840) were first reads held over for review.

Moved: Tricia Andrews[*] · Second: Dennis Priore[*] · Voice vote, carried

8 Adjourn Passed

Motion to close the meeting.

Moved: Dennis Priore[*] · Second: Michael Fuchs[*] ("Mike") · Voice vote, carried

By the Numbers
6Red Devils honored
81%budget approval · top among Erie 1 districts
$994,808bond authority for bus purchases
192students in CSE + CPSE recommendations
7new teachers appointed
12policies on the docket (1 adopted, 11 first reads)
3incumbent trustees re-elected in May
47minutes, gavel to gavel
Editor's Note

This is the Listening Post's first brief covering the Clarence Board of Education. The recording was recovered from the district's publicly posted meeting video after an automated live capture was missed; the broadcast captured the full public meeting (executive sessions are held separately and are not broadcast). Names were verified two ways: staff honorees and their nominators against the official agenda packet's recognition list, and the seven board members against the Clarence Central School District's official members listing (the three re-elected trustees also matched the agenda's certified election results). Several administrators named only in the audio—those marked [*]—could not yet be confirmed against official minutes, which the district posts on a lag; their spellings should be treated as provisional. Items marked [*] indicate a proper noun corrected from a likely transcription error or pending minutes verification. Votes were taken by voice, so movers and seconders reflect the first names heard in the audio, mapped to the verified roster; individual yes/no positions are not recorded.

Overheard
  • "I'm tearing up just reading that." — Dr. Frahm, mid-nomination[1]
  • "There was an angel of a woman running this classroom." — a parent's nomination of a kindergarten teacher[1]
  • "We catch her with a flashlight after she should be in bed." — a parent, on a daughter who now reads for fun[1]
  • "Today we are hearing and seeing Logan's beautiful voice." — parents of a child in speech therapy[1]
  • "It is a Michigan Wolverine sweatshirt. It was sent to Michigan State." — the board's parting gift to its student rep[1]
  • "It's not a hop. It's a family shop." — an aside on the student-rep role[1]
Sources
[1] clarence_BoE_20260608_transcript.txt — Clarence Central School District Board of Education, Regular Board Meeting, CMS Auditorium, Monday, June 8, 2026 (47.3 minutes captured; full public meeting). faster-whisper "medium" model, language confidence p=1.00, 678 transcript segments. Source MP3: clarence_BoE_20260608.mp3 (32 MB). The scheduled live capture was missed; the meeting was recovered from the district's publicly posted video (youtube.com/watch?v=QaUBjsXZd_U) and transcribed by the standard workflow. Cross-referenced against the official meeting agenda packet (clarence_BoE_20260608_agenda.pdf, 293 pp.) for docket order, recognition names, vote results, and resolution figures, and against the district's official Board of Education members listing for the roster.
[*] Indicates a proper noun corrected from a likely transcription homophone, or a name heard only in the audio and pending verification against the official minutes. Verify against the district's official record before quoting in any formal communication.
The WNY Listening Post · The Public Record · Clarence Board of Education · June 8, 2026 · Compiled 2026-06-10
Compiled from public meeting transcripts; transcriptions are AI-generated and may contain errors. Names, dates, dollar amounts, and details should be verified before action.