The Quillayute Valley School District Board of Education meets tonight at 5:30 p.m. at the Forks High School Library, where mounting community frustration over student safety is expected to clash with a routine administrative agenda.

In recent meetings, parents and former educators have packed the boardroom to protest the district’s handling of an active Title IX investigation into veteran track coach Brian Weekes for alleged boundary violations.

The ongoing public outcry follows a recent $250,000 federal verdict against the district for cultivating a hostile work environment.

While tonight’s public agenda focuses largely on bureaucratic business—including an “Annual Board Self-Assessment”—a few key agenda items warrant close attention from the community:

  • New Phones vs. Missing Tapes: The board is scheduled to vote on spending $48,886.29 in taxpayer funds for new desktop phones. This request comes just weeks after former staff testified that the administration allegedly failed to preserve basic security footage of an alleged 2019 incident involving Weekes and a female athlete, prompting questions about the district’s spending and safety priorities.
  • Final Enrollment Numbers: Superintendent Diana Reaume will present the final June enrollment count. Last month, parents explicitly warned the board that a perceived lack of accountability was driving families to pull their children from the district. Tonight’s report will provide hard data on whether a student exodus is underway.
  • Executive Session: The meeting will conclude behind closed doors with a “Review of Public Employee Performance.” The agenda notes the possibility of public action following the session. The community will be watching closely to see if the board finally takes decisive action, or if concerns continue to vanish into what one resident dubbed the district’s “black hole.”
Share this article
The link has been copied!
Republish this story

Our stories are free to republish, online or in print, under these rules:

  • Credit The Olympic Herald and the author, and link back to this story.
  • Don't edit the story except for style, length, or to update time references.
  • If you republish online, use our canonical URL so search engines credit the original.
  • Don't sell the story or use it primarily to sell advertising.

Questions? Contact us.