Mead School District 

Parents should always have a role in their children’s education – make your voice heard!
There is a School Board election for Mead School District on November 7, 2023. Beginning October 20, voters can deposit their ballot in an official drop box. Voters residing in Mead School District will have an opportunity to vote for one candidate for each of the three School Board positions:

For District 2, voters will choose between Alan Nolan and Denny Denholm.

For District 3, voters will choose between Jennifer Killman and Jaime Stacy.

For District 4, voters will choose between Michael Cannon and David Knaggs.

Click each candidate’s name to learn more about their positions and priorities.

District 2

Nolan is concerned that “unreasonable COVID restrictions harmed learning, with 10% fewer Mead students meeting grade level standards now.”

 

Nolan is endorsed by Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rogers, the Family Policy Institute of Washington, and the Spokane County GOP.

For more information, visit his website.

Denholm voted to approve a policy that allows students to change their gender identity without alerting their parents and allows biological males to use the women’s restroom if they identify as women.

For more information, visit his website.

District 3

Killman believes “parents of our community should be the primary stakeholders in their children’s lives and education, not organizations or government.”

 

Killman is endorsed by Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers and the Spokane GOP.

For more information, visit her website.

Stacy believes “we all share the belief that our children deserve an equitable education.”

 

Stacy is endorsed by Fuse Washington, known as “Washington’s largest progressive organization.”

For more information, visit her website.

District 4

Cannon says he is “not in favor of mandating masks in schools” and “not in favor of vaccine mandates.”

 

He believes “parents are the primary stakeholder in their child’s education.” Cannon is endorsed by the Spokane County GOP.

For more information, visit his website.

Knaggs believes “We need to be focusing on getting our district on firm financial footing – not culture war issues we’re not seeing in the district and are not impacting us.”

For more information, visit his website.

To confirm you live in Mead School District, visit the Mead District school board region map.

For additional information about how and when to vote, visit the elections page produced by the Office of the Washington Secretary of State.

Paid for by Free to Learn Action. This website is a project of Free to Learn Action. It is not affiliated with, associated with, or sponsored by Mead School District. The official government website for the school board can be found here. © Free to Learn Action 2023. All rights reserved.