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Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District (LVJUSD) is a public school district located in Livermore, California, United States.It is located in Alameda County.As of August 2024, the superintendent is Torie Gibson, [1] and the school board is composed of Steven Drouin, Emily Prusso, Craig Bueno, Kristie Wang, and Yanira Guzman.
The public schools in Livermore are part of the Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District (LVJUSD). [95] The district has 11 elementary (K-5 and K-8) schools, three middle schools (grades 6–8), two comprehensive high schools, and three alternative high schools.
Founded in 1891, Livermore High School is a public high school located in the city of Livermore, California, United States. It is one of two comprehensive high schools in the Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District , with Granada High School being the other.
Granada High School is a public high school located at 400 Wall Street in Livermore, California, United States. It is part of the Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District . Granada was established as the town's second comprehensive public high school in response to significant population growth in the 1960s. [ 3 ]
Established in 2010, the school was authorized by the Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District (LVJUSD). This school is now defunct as a result of the bankruptcy of its parent charter management operator Tri-Valley Learning Corporation (TVLC) resulting after the completion of an AB139 Extraordinary Audit ordered by Alameda County Office ...
A unified school district (in the states of Arizona, California, Kansas and Oregon) or unit school district (in Illinois), in the United States of America, is a school district that generally includes and operates both primary schools (kindergarten through middle school or junior high) and high schools (grades 9–12) under the same district control.
The law holds BIDs accountable to all payees into the district through a board of directors that is composed of business and property owners located within the district. All property owners, lessees and residents within the district are given the opportunity to vote for the tax in their district.
More than 30,000 public-school teachers of the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) went on strike from January 14 to 22, 2019. [1] Protesting low pay, large class sizes, inadequate support staffs of nurses and librarians, and the proliferation of charter schools, the teachers went on strike for the first time in the district in 30 years.