Folsom Cordova Unified School District (FCUSD) is a school district headquartered in Rancho Cordova, California. It covers the cities of Folsom, Rancho Cordova, and most of Mather. There are 36 separate schools, including adult education and independent study programs. There are four high schools, four middle schools, twenty-one elementary schools, and five alternative schools.[2]
History
The Folsom Cordova Unified School District was created in 1949 when the Folsom Union High School District joined with the Granite Grammar School District. The new School District was called the Folsom Cordova Joint School District and there were a total of 767 students enrolled at only two school sites which were Granite Elementary School at 909 Mormon Street and Folsom High School at 715 Riley Street in Folsom. In June 1967 the school district was renamed the Folsom Cordova Unified School District. Kitty Hawk and Mather Heights School were located on Mather Air Force Base until that facility closed down in 1993. The after-school Student Care Program started in 1986. The Adolescent Parent Program began in 1985. The school district office was located at 125 East Bidwell Street from 1963 to 2012. (Today that property is the location of an apartment complex.)
The Folsom Cordova Unified School District tried year-round education beginning with the opening of Folsom Hills Elementary School in 1991. Folsom Hills was placed on a single track 60/20 schedule for the 1991–92 school year. All the students and staff were at school for sixty days and then off track for twenty days. Starting in the 1992–93 school year, Carl Sundahl, Folsom Hills and Oak Chan Elementary Schools went on a three-track year-round schedule. Folsom Middle School also began a year-round schedule that same school year however it was a four-track schedule meaning there were students and staff present nearly every day of the year at the middle school. Folsom High never utilized the year-round schedule nor did any schools in Rancho Cordova. By 1998, all schools in the Folsom Cordova Unified School District had reverted to the traditional school schedule and year-round education came to an end.
From 1939 to 1984 the Folsom Union High School District and then the Folsom Cordova Unified School District operated a school at Represa inside Folsom State Prison. The school taught academic and vocational subjects to the prisoners. Numerous high school diplomas were awarded at the prison school. The Federal Government took over control of that school in 1984.
Cordova Lane Elementary School (Opened in 1960, school closed in 2010 and transformed to Cordova Lane Center)
Folsom Lake High School at 955 Riley Street in Folsom (Opened in 2000, school relocated in 2020 to Folsom High Campus and buildings on Riley Street removed in 2021)
Granite School at 909 Mormon Street in Folsom (Opened in 1915, closed in 1966, transformed to an administration building and property sold in 2021)
Kitty Hawk Elementary School (Opened in 1962, school closed in 1989 and transformed to Folsom Cordova Community Charter School)
Riverview Elementary School (Opened in 1965, school closed in 2010 and transformed into Riverview STEM Academy)
Transportation/Warehouse Building at 701 Bidwell Street, Folsom (Constructed 1946 and property sold in 2015)
Walnutwood Elementary School (Opened in 1965, school closed in 1989 and transformed to Community Education Center)
School Board
The School Board went from "at-large" elections to "by district" elections in 2020.
District
Years
Name
Terms
1
2022 -
Kara Lofthouse
1
5
2022 -
Jennifer Laret
1
2
2020 -
Tim Hooey
1
1
2018 - 2022
Joshua Hoover
1
3
2018 -
David Reid
2
4
2016 -
Chris Clark
2
N/A
2014 - 2018
Sarah Aquino
1
N/A
2010 - 2018
Zak Ford
2
2
2008 - 2020
Joanne Reinking
3
N/A
2004 - 2008
Mary McCormick
1
N/A
2002 - 2014
Richard Shaw
3
5
2002 - 2022
Ed Short
5
N/A
1998 - 2002
Jim McGowan
1
N/A
1998 - 2006
Sara Myers
2
N/A
1996 - 2004; 2006 - 2010
Roger Benton
3
N/A
1996 - 2016
Teresa Stanley
5
Notable teachers
Pete Chilcutt, former NBA basketball player; sixth-grade math and science teacher at Folsom Middle School.[10]
Bliatout, Bruce Thoupaou, Bruce T. Downing, Judy Lewis, and Dao Yang. "Handbook for Teaching Hmong-Speaking Students." Southeast Asia Community Resource Center. Folsom Cordova Unified School District, 1988.