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Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher 200-U Board of Education for June 10, 2026

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Beecher 200-U Board of Education Meeting | June 10, 2026

The Beecher Community Unit School District 200-U Board of Education held its regular meeting Wednesday, June 10, 2026, at 6 p.m. in the Beecher High School library, with six of seven members present and Adriana Diachenko absent. The board’s most consequential business was a status report on summer roofing, window and floor projects across all three buildings (see “Beecher District Pushes Summer Roof, Window Projects Toward Fall Deadline”) and the $7,800 purchase of Red Rover substitute-management software (see “Beecher 200-U Board Buys Red Rover Substitute Software”). Members also cleared a slate of year-end fiscal and governance items and several personnel actions (see the FY27 governance and personnel stories). The board entered closed session for personnel and collective-bargaining matters, returning to open session at 6:52 p.m., and adjourned at 7:10 p.m.

Board Adopts Cellphone, Policy and Handbook Second Readings

The board approved three second-reading items: the PressPlus 121 policy update, the Beecher 200-U cellphone policy, and updates to the student handbook. Administrators said the cellphone policy meets the requirements of a new state law governing student cellphone use in schools. All three passed unanimously among the members present. Second readings are the final step in the district’s policy-adoption process, following an initial reading and committee review. The cellphone policy aligns the district with statewide changes taking effect for the coming school year, though the specific statute was not detailed at the meeting.

State Track Qualifiers Recognized

The meeting opened with recognition of the district’s state track and field qualifiers. At the junior high level, eighth-grader Ben Jerkatis placed second in the discus at the IESA state meet with a throw of 45.26 meters. At the high school level, the girls 4×800-meter relay team of Raina McKay, Maeve McDermott, Madison Smith and Rachel Imig finished 38th at the IHSA Class 1A state meet, and Imig also ran the 1,600 meters. Wences Baumgartner qualified in both the triple jump, where he finished 20th, and the high jump, where he placed fifth. Administrators praised the young relay squad and noted most return next season.

Scholar-Athletes Honored; 90 Graduate

High School Principal Mike Meyer reported that seniors Elena Kvasnicka and Wences Baumgartner were honored at the River Valley Conference Scholar Luncheon, with Kvasnicka named the girls scholar-athlete and a $750 scholarship recipient and Baumgartner the runner-up at $500. Meyer said 21 seniors earned RVC Academic All-Conference honors, calling the group exceptional within the conference. The district graduated 90 seniors, with a post-graduation survey showing 48 bound for four-year colleges, 22 for two-year or community colleges, and smaller numbers headed to trade school, apprenticeships and the workforce. Meyer also served as the Memorial Day guest speaker for the local Amvets post: “It was a great honor, and I almost made it through without crying,” he said.

Board Weighs BeecherFest Beer-Tent Volunteering

Members discussed a request from the Village of Beecher to help staff a beer tent at BeecherFest, the community’s Fourth of July celebration running in early July, with the village and the school group each running one side of the operation. The discussion centered on whether enough volunteers — roughly four people per side per shift — could be lined up, with several members and their spouses indicating availability. The item was a discussion only; no formal board action was taken. Volunteering was listed among upcoming dates, with the festival noted for July 2.

Spring Enrollment Reported

Building reports showed spring enrollment of 439 students at Beecher Elementary (down from 460 a year earlier), 245 at Beecher Junior High (90 sixth-graders, 72 seventh-graders and 83 eighth-graders), and 252 at Beecher High School (87 freshmen, 97 sophomores and 68 juniors, before the system rolled over for the new year). The numbers were included in principals’ written reports in the board packet rather than discussed in detail at the meeting.

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