Miller Creek Elementary School District

The Miller Creek Elementary School District, formerly the Dixie School District, is a school district located in San Rafael, California that operates four schools in the northern portion of the city: Mary E. Silveira Elementary School in the Marinwood area, Vallecito Elementary School in the Terra Linda area, Lucas Valley Elementary School, and Miller Creek Middle School in the Marinwood area. All four are California Distinguished Schools.

The Dixie Schoolhouse, located at Miller Creek Middle School

History

The Miller Creek School District was named after a local creek and existing middle school.[1] It was formerly named the Dixie School District after the Dixie Schoolhouse, a one-room schoolhouse built in 1864. The Dixie school board voted in April 2019 to form a committee to choose a new name as many name changes were being considered during the George Floyd protests throughout the country after considering the association with the 11 states in the South that seceded from the U.S. to form the Confederacy.[2]

The school board has five members. As of 2017, the interim superintendent is Becky Rosales, former superintendent of the Waugh School District in Petaluma. Dr. Lustig Yamashiro (2017–2019) and Mr. Lohawasser (1997–2017) were the predecessors.

gollark: Unfortunately, people do evilness and you cannot actually prevent this, and just blindly wanting them not to is unhelpful.
gollark: In the old days of the internet, you had open SMTP relays and no encryption and whatever. This was apparently quite nice, as long as nobody touched it and nobody did evilness.
gollark: Too bad, it is, you can't just arbitrarily trust everyone ever and systems which actually recognize this are important.
gollark: This does not prevent you from trusting people if you want to for whatever reason.
gollark: The whole blockchain thing is a clever mechanism to low-trust-ly synchronize data, in this case a transaction log.

References

  1. "Marin County school district changes controversial name after months of debate". Associated Press. 2019-07-10. Retrieved 2020-04-22 via Santa Rosa Press Democrat.
  2. Fry, Hannah (April 17, 2019). "Dixie School District will change its name after heated debate over racism". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 17, 2019.


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