effort.
DIRECTORY
INFORMATION
LIMITATION
No person can release or permit access to directory information if that
information concerning students will be used in a profit-making plan or
activity. Those individuals having care and control of those records may
require disclosure of the requestor’s identify and intended use of the
directory information to determine if the intended use is for a profit-
making plan or activity.
3319.321
DISPOSAL OF
PROPERTY
A board may by majority vote dispose of any building, land, or
equipment owned by the district.
A school district may also exchange property with a municipal
corporation in which the district is located.
When a school district wishes to dispose of real property, it must first
offer the property for sale to any start-up community school located
within district boundaries at a price not greater than the appraised fair
market value of the property. If more than one community school
authority accepts the offer, the board must sell the property to the
governing authority that first accepts the offer.
The law requires school districts with real property that has been
used for classroom operations since July 1, 1998, but has not been
in use for two years, to offer to community schools located within the
district an opportunity to buy or lease the property. If one community
school notifies the district treasurer, in writing within 60 days after
the district board makes the offer, of its intention to purchase the
property, the district board must sell that property to the community
school for the appraised fair market value of the property. However,
if more than one community school notifies the district treasurer, in
writing within the 60-day period, of their intention to purchase, the
district board must conduct a public auction to sell the property. All
community schools within the school district, regardless of whether
they accepted the offer, may bid on the property at auction. The
district board is not required to accept any bid for the property that is
lower than the appraised fair market value of the property.
If two or more community schools located within the
district notify
the district treasurer, in writing, of their intention to lease the
property, the district board must conduct a lottery to
select the
community school to which the district board must lease
the
property. The lease price offered by a district board cannot be
higher than the fair market value of the leasehold. If no community
school governing authority accepts the offer to purchase or lease
the property within 60 days after the offer is made, the district board
may offer the property to any other entity.
However, notwithstanding any of the above, when a school district
board decides to dispose of its real property, it must first offer that
property for sale to the governing authorities of high-performing
community schools and newly established community schools with
a community school model that has a track record of high quality
academic performance, as determined by ODE, before offering it to
all start-up community schools and any college preparatory
boarding schools located in the district as required under current
law.
3313.17
3313.40
3313.41
3313.411
3313.413
DISPOSAL OF
PROPERTY TO NON-
PROFIT
School district having property “not needed for school district use, is
obsolete, or is unfit for the use for which it was acquired” may donate the
property to a non-profit organization if the Board’s estimate of value is
3313.41