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LION

Local Integrity Oversight Network

Tag: Wylie ISD

LION oversight of Wylie Independent School District (Collin, Dallas, Rockwall Counties).

  • Wylie ISD produces internal communications on Song of Solomon (WYLIEISD-PIA-002 production)

    On June 11, 2026 at 8:08 AM Central Time, Ian M. Halperin, Executive Director of Community Relations & Marketing, produced the records responsive to WYLIEISD-PIA-002 on the narrowed scope LION proposed on May 20, 2026 and the district accepted on May 26, 2026. The production was delivered as a single Google Drive folder link; the district did not charge a cost-recovery fee. LION recognizes the production-without-fee outcome as effectively honoring the public-interest accommodation contemplated in Texas Government Code §552.267(a).

    The production includes the 2025–26 Wylie ISD Approved Whole Group Novel List (where Song of Solomon appears on the Grade 12 Advanced track, footnoted “Lit Circle in 26-27”); the May 5, 2026 Lit Circle Book List (a master tracker showing rubric and literary-justification status by title); the Literature Review Talking Points; the blank Literature Review Request and Justification form template; and the Song of Solomon internal communications portfolio — a 62 MB consolidated container of internal emails on the AP English Literature controversy.

    The internal-communications portfolio documents, among other things, the following matters of public record:

    The Literature Review Committee assigned reader who emailed about Song of Solomon two months after the supposed January 13, 2026 LRC vote did not know which teacher at the district had proposed the book or which classroom it was destined for. On December 9, 2025, Tedra Ault — a Wylie ISD ELAR Learning Specialist and member of the LRC — sent identical emails to three named readers (Makahilahila, Morales, Spillyards) thanking them for “volunteering to read Song of Solomon” and confirming book delivery. Under the Wylie ISD LRC Guidelines, the readers serve as the substantive basis for the Committee’s deliberation: “At least one member of the Literature Review Committee will read the book and report to the committee on the literary justification of the text and its alignment with district objectives and criteria.” On March 11, 2026 at 1:17 PM Central Time — two months after the January 13, 2026 LRC vote — Tiffani Makahilahila emailed Amy Hon asking “Who is the AP ELA 4 teacher at High?” and explaining: “I have the Song of Solomon book from lit committee, and it will be put to better use in his/her classroom than on my shelf.” The book had been proposed by Steven Ray Parker — the AP English IV teacher at Wylie East High School — for use in his class. The production contains no follow-on communications from Morales or Spillyards related to their assigned review.

    The day after parents were informed of the assignment, the district’s Secondary Library Coordinator pulled Song of Solomon from open library shelving at Wylie HS. On April 2, 2026 at 10:31 AM Central Time, Wylie ISD Secondary Library Coordinator Rhia Johnson wrote to Executive Director of Secondary Curriculum Stephen Davis, Ed.D., reporting that she had instructed Wylie HS librarians: “to just keep it at the circ desk and if any students ask for it, it’s not available at the moment and to verify if they are needing it for a class assignment or if they are wanting it for leisure reading. I thought that might be best until we decide if it is going to be a ‘By Request Only’ title or if it needs to be weeded or if it is fine to stay on the shelves.”

    Wylie ISD’s Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum & Instruction instructed campus principals to limit teacher classroom commentary on Song of Solomon. On April 1, 2026 at 3:46 PM Central Time, Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum & Instruction Amanda Lannan emailed Wylie East High School Principal Tiffany Doolan (cc April Cunningham and Executive Director of Secondary Curriculum Stephen Davis, Ed.D.): “Please advise the teachers to refrain from discussing their personal feelings regarding this matter with the class. Encourage them to talk with you or Mrs. Lindsey if they have questions or concerns.” The same email confirmed Wylie ISD had not previously trained the LRC on Texas Senate Bill 412 (89th Legislature, 2025): “I will review SB 412 with the district Literature Review Committee and the Director team. We will work on a plan to communicate that legislation with all teachers as well.” Senate Bill 412 repealed the educator affirmative defense to Texas Penal Code §43.24 effective September 1, 2025 — four months before the January 13, 2026 LRC approval of Song of Solomon.

    Wylie East’s principal acknowledged in writing to AP English families that the district should have notified parents in advance. The letter to AP English IV families from Principal Doolan on April 1, 2026 at 5:33 PM Central Time stated: “I also want to acknowledge that we should have communicated with families in advance about this assignment and the availability of alternatives. Just as we notify parents when students check out books from the library, we recognize the importance of keeping families informed about classroom assignments that may include more complex or sensitive themes.”

    The May 5, 2026 Lit Circle Book List records no rubric and no literary justification on file for Song of Solomon. On the district’s master tracker dated May 5, 2026, the Song of Solomon row carries no entry in the “Rubric on File” column and no entry in the “Literary Justification on File” column, and the Notes column reads “Lit Circle Only” — a status that on the 2025–26 Approved Whole Group Novel List is footnoted as effective 2026–27, distinct from the original “Whole Group” approval recorded on the January 13, 2026 LRC submission form.

    LION today asked Mr. Halperin, in a reply on the WYLIEISD-PIA-002 thread, to produce five additional categories of records that LION believes fall within the same narrowed scope but did not appear in today’s production: the reader-evaluation reports submitted by Makahilahila, Morales, and Spillyards; the written LRC approval document required by the district’s LRC Guidelines; any written directive issued to AP English IV teachers regarding their classroom discussion of Song of Solomon; communications surrounding the Wylie HS library access decision; and communications surrounding the demotion of Song of Solomon from “Whole Group” to “Lit Circle Only” placement.

    Source: Email from Ian M. Halperin (Ian.Halperin@wylieisd.net) to LION on WYLIEISD-PIA-002, June 11, 2026, 8:08 AM CT. Production records delivered via Google Drive folder. Documents and email correspondence on file at LION.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD accepts LION’s narrowed scope on the $3,798 Song of Solomon internal-communications request

    On May 26, 2026 at 7:53 AM Central Time, Ian M. Halperin, Executive Director of Community Relations & Marketing, replied to LION’s May 20 response to the $3,798 cost notice on WYLIEISD-PIA-002 — the LION request for internal communications among Wylie ISD administrators, Literature Review Committee members, and campus staff regarding the content-suitability evaluation of any approved-list novel.

    In LION’s May 20 response, LION had operated under four Texas Public Information Act provisions — Government Code §552.267 (public-interest fee waiver), §552.222(b) (narrowing the request scope), §552.269 (overcharge complaint), and §552.2615 (cost-estimate framework) — and proposed substantially narrowed search parameters: Song of Solomon-specific communications only, named custodians, time window August 1, 2025 to April 28, 2026.

    Halperin’s reply accepted LION’s proposed narrowing, stating: “Narrowing the scope of the request will substantially reduce the fees associated with this request, particularly the portion related to custodians, without removing any responsive documents. I will perform a new search based on your revisions.” The reply did not separately rule on LION’s §552.267 public-interest fee waiver demand.

    As of this writing, no revised cost estimate, no production on the narrowed request, and no written determination on the §552.267 waiver have been received from Wylie ISD.

    Source: Email from Ian M. Halperin (OpenRecords@wylieisd.net) to LION on WYLIEISD-PIA-002, May 26, 2026, 7:53 AM CT.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD Superintendent formally declines to rescind the Song of Solomon Literature Review Committee approval

    On May 19, 2026 at 4:01 PM Central Time, Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer replied by email to LION on the deadline set by LION’s May 11 final formal request that the district rescind the January 13, 2026 Literature Review Committee approval of Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon.

    Dr. Spicer’s reply stated, in relevant part: “At this time, the district does not intend to take any further action beyond the directives and procedural changes already implemented.” The reply also stated that the district “does not share the conclusion that the committee’s approval of the novel constituted a violation of Texas law or exposed district employees to criminal liability,” framed the April 2026 Literature Review Committee reforms as “continuous improvement and responsiveness to community feedback,” and stated that the district considered its position on the matter communicated and final.

    The reply did not address the statutory timeline (Senate Bill 412’s September 1, 2025 effective date relative to the January 13, 2026 approval), the legislative record cited in the May 11 letter, or the content the proposing teacher had documented on the district’s own AP Literature Request and Justification form.

    The reply closed the direct correspondence channel with the superintendent. The January 13, 2026 LRC approval remains an active district record.

    Source: Email from Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer to LION, May 19, 2026, 4:01 PM CT.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD produces local board policies on instructional-materials selection and reconsideration

    On May 14, 2026 at 1:07 PM Central Time, Wylie ISD produced its response to WYLIEISD-PIA-003 — LION’s April 28 Public Information Act request for Board Policy on Instructional Materials Selection and Reconsideration. The production arrived one business day after the Texas Government Code §552.221 statutory deadline.

    The production, signed off by Ian M. Halperin, Executive Director of Community Relations & Marketing, contained seven unique documents: Wylie ISD Board Policy EFA(LEGAL) (the state-law framework on instructional resources, which carries the Texas Penal Code §43.24 harmful-material and §43.21 obscene-content definitions in the district’s adopted policy); Board Policy EFA(LOCAL) (the local instructional-resources policy — the same document whose “Adopted: 1/20/2026” footer dates the policy update at seven days after the Song of Solomon LRC approval); EHAA(LEGAL); EHAA(LOCAL); the Wylie ISD Literature Review Committee Guidelines; the 2025–26 Literature Review Request and Justification timeline; and the TEA Certification signature page.

    An eighth attachment was a byte-for-byte duplicate of the 2025–26 TEA Certification produced earlier under WYLIEISD-PIA-001.

    Source: WYLIEISD-PIA-003 production, May 14, 2026, 1:07 PM CT, signed by Ian M. Halperin; eight attachments (seven unique).

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD produces TEA Certification of Instructional Materials, board-ratified March 31, 2025

    On May 11, 2026 at 11:30 AM Central Time, Wylie ISD produced its response to WYLIEISD-PIA-004 — LION’s April 29 Public Information Act request for the district’s TEA Certification of Provision of Instructional Materials and the accompanying board-ratification records. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) is the state agency that supervises Texas public education.

    The production, signed off by Ian M. Halperin, Executive Director of Community Relations & Marketing, contained four PDFs (33 pages), including the 2025–26 TEA Certification of Provision of Instructional Materials and the signed signature page establishing that the Wylie ISD Board of Trustees ratified the 2025–26 Certification on March 31, 2025.

    The 2025–26 Certification is the district’s annual filing under Texas Education Code §31.1011 in which the Board attests that the district provides instructional materials covering the essential knowledge and skills and protects students from harmful content under Texas Penal Code §43.22 and TEC §28.0022.

    The production also noted that records held by TEA itself (as opposed to records held by the district) must be requested separately from TEA’s own Public Information Officer.

    Sources: WYLIEISD-PIA-004 production, May 11, 2026, 11:30 AM CT, signed by Ian M. Halperin; four PDFs (33 pages); Texas Education Code §31.1011.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • LION delivers a final formal request to Wylie ISD: rescind the Song of Solomon approval or LION escalates

    On May 11, 2026 at 10:28 AM Central Time, LION delivered a final formal request to Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer on the January 13, 2026 Literature Review Committee approval of Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon.

    The letter acknowledged the district’s April 29 and May 5 commitments — that the novel would not be required reading, that it would not appear on independent reading lists or in classroom libraries — and disagreed with the district’s position that formal rescission of the January 13 approval was available only through the EFA(LOCAL) reconsideration process. The letter cited Texas Education Code §11.1511 as the source of Board plenary authority over instructional materials.

    Editorial note added June 11, 2026: subsequent verification identified the correct statutory chain for the Board’s plenary authority over instructional materials as Texas Education Code §11.151(b) and §31.101 together with 19 Texas Administrative Code §66.104(a). The May 11 letter went out as filed; the correction is noted here for the public record.

    The letter laid out the underlying legal concern: Texas Senate Bill 412 (89th Legislature, Regular Session, 2025) took effect September 1, 2025 — four months before the January 13, 2026 LRC approval — and repealed the educator affirmative defense formerly available under Texas Penal Code §43.24.

    The letter requested a written response by May 19, 2026, and committed LION to a six-step escalation if the district declined: trustee-by-trustee outreach; a Texas Education Agency complaint; a letter of inquiry to the Collin County District Attorney; engagement with state legislators; public disclosure of the full correspondence record; and a broader review of Wylie ISD instructional materials selected under the framework that approved Song of Solomon.

    Source: LION final formal request letter to Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer, May 11, 2026, 10:28 AM CT.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD demands a $3,798 bond before producing internal communications on novel content-suitability

    On May 11, 2026 at 9:10 AM Central Time, Wylie ISD issued a cost-estimate notice on WYLIEISD-PIA-002LION’s April 28 Public Information Act request that sought, among other items, all written communications among administrators, Literature Review Committee members, and campus staff regarding the content-suitability evaluation of any approved-list novel.

    The notice, signed by Ian M. Halperin, Executive Director of Community Relations & Marketing, demanded a $3,798.00 bond under Texas Government Code §552.263(a) before the district would begin production. The itemized estimate, framed under §552.2615, claimed 211 hours of labor at $15 per hour ($3,165) plus 20% overhead ($633), based on a stated search result of 5,493 emails.

    The notice did not respond to LION’s §552.267 public-interest fee waiver, which had been expressly invoked in the request as filed on April 28. Under §552.267, the public-interest waiver determination is mandatory when invoked.

    The cost notice was sent the same calendar day as LION’s final formal demand letter to Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer on the Song of Solomon record, transmitted at 10:28 AM Central Time — approximately 78 minutes after the cost notice.

    Source: Wylie ISD cost-estimate notice on WYLIEISD-PIA-002, May 11, 2026, 9:10 AM CT, signed by Ian M. Halperin.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD Superintendent confirms in writing that the January 13 Song of Solomon approval has not been rescinded

    On May 5, 2026 at 12:52 PM Central Time, Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer replied by email to LION on the same correspondence thread that began with the April 28, 2026 compliance letter on the Literature Review Committee approval of Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon.

    Dr. Spicer stated in writing: “The January 13, 2026 approval has not been formally rescinded as a district record.”

    The reply framed formal rescission as available only through the EFA(LOCAL) reconsideration process. Dr. Spicer also conceded that the College Board does not mandate specific titles for AP English Literature, and confirmed that Song of Solomon would not appear on Wylie ISD independent reading lists, in approved classroom libraries, or on teacher-maintained reading lists.

    The written admission — that an administrative directive against the title coexists with a formal record of the LRC approval that remains in place — sets the documented predicate for the formal-record question that runs through the remainder of the correspondence.

    Source: Email from Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer to LION, May 5, 2026, 12:52 PM CT.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • Wylie ISD Superintendent commits in writing that Song of Solomon will not be assigned as required reading

    On April 29, 2026 at 9:48 AM Central Time, Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer replied by email from kim.spicer@wylieisd.net to LION’s April 28 compliance letter on the Literature Review Committee approval of Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon.

    Dr. Spicer’s reply stated, in relevant part: “Moving forward, the novel will not be assigned as required reading in AP English Literature, as it does not align with the expectations and values of our school board and community.” The reply also stated that Song of Solomon would remain “available” as an option for individual student reading, with a mature-content disclaimer.

    The reply announced procedural reforms to the Literature Review Committee process and linked an April 2026 LRC Update presentation the district had prepared for the Board of Trustees. The announced reforms included a minimum of three reviewers per proposed text; a separate approval step before LRC review; a prohibition on the proposing teacher serving as a reader or campus representative; recording the number of votes for and against; parent-notification procedures; and a requirement that an alternative text be offered.

    The reply did not address whether the January 13, 2026 LRC approval would be formally rescinded as a district record.

    Sources: Email from Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer to LION, April 29, 2026, 9:48 AM CT; Wylie ISD April 2026 LRC Update presentation.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org

  • LION files three additional Wylie ISD Public Information Act requests on novel-list, policy, and TEA-certification records

    On the evening of April 28, 2026, hours after delivering a Song of Solomon compliance letter to Wylie ISD Superintendent Dr. Kim Spicer, LION filed three additional Public Information Act requests with Wylie ISD. The requests were transmitted to OpenRecords@wylieisd.net, Wylie ISD’s designated public-information email address.

    WYLIEISD-PIA-002 sought: the district’s AP English approved-novel list and the Literature Review Committee’s evaluation criteria; LRC member identities; and all written communications among administrators, LRC members, or campus staff regarding the content-suitability evaluation of any approved-list novel from January 1, 2024 to the request date. The request expressly invoked the Texas Government Code §552.267 public-interest fee waiver.

    WYLIEISD-PIA-003 sought: Board Policy on Instructional Materials Selection and Reconsideration — EFA, EFA(LOCAL), EFAA, EFB — including adoption-history records.

    Filed the next morning, WYLIEISD-PIA-004 sought: Wylie ISD’s annual TEA Certification of Provision of Instructional Materials filings and the board-ratification records that accompany those filings.

    Sources: WYLIEISD-PIA-002 request, April 28, 2026; WYLIEISD-PIA-003 request, April 28, 2026; WYLIEISD-PIA-004 request, April 29, 2026.

    Errors or corrections: corrections@lionwatchtx.org