How a Rural Washington Community Saved Their School and Changed State Policy
Overview
When Prescott School District in rural Washington state faced state-ordered dissolution, the families who depended on it most had never attended a school board meeting.
Elevate, a StriveTogether Cradle to Career Network member serving Walla Walla and Columbia County, helped change that by organizing families, connecting partners and building the community power that turned a crisis into lasting policy change.
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A Community That Showed Up
After Elevate built trust and tools for parents, a board meeting that once drew 10 people filled with more than 100 Vista Hermosa families.
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A Levy Won on Community Terms
Elevate paired family testimony with tax data to pass a local levy with 87% of the vote and gather 200+ signatures for state legislators.
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Policy That Goes Beyond One District
Two 2026 bills secured $640,000 for Prescott and changed budget rules for rural districts statewide.
National Background
Small rural school districts across the United States are under growing pressure. Enrollment is falling, tax bases are shrinking and many districts lack the staff needed to catch financial problems before they reach a crisis point. According to the Urban Institute, 42% of all U.S. school districts are designated rural, serving nearly 7.7 million students across the country.
Rural students come from a range of socioeconomic backgrounds and racial and ethnic groups. These districts are less likely to offer a broad curriculum, less able to fill job openings and retain teachers and often spend more on transportation because students live farther from school. When something goes wrong in a small district, there is often no system to absorb the impact and the consequences fall hardest on the communities that can least afford them.
In rural areas, school closures can be very disruptive. Shuttering a small town’s only school can mean the next nearest option is an hour’s bus ride away. The process of closure is often made with little community input, with decisions driven by state or district officials rather than the families who depend most on those schools.
Those families, especially in migrant and immigrant communities, also face the steepest barriers to participation: language, fear, long working hours, limited access to information and a mistrust of institutions. When a challenge arrives, they are typically the last to know and the least likely to be heard.
Keeping the school open preserves stability. Students can remain in their community, stay connected to the peers and educators who know them and continue learning without disruption. Over time, that stability supports stronger outcomes, higher graduation rates and clearer pathways to postsecondary opportunity and long-term economic mobility.
Research from the Annenberg Institute at Brown University found that by age 26, students who experienced a school closure were 4.8% less likely to have attended college, 4.7% less likely to have completed college and 1.3% less likely to be employed than peers at schools with similar demographics who did not experience a closure. Annual earnings between ages 25 and 27 were also 3.4% lower. These impacts were most pronounced among Hispanic students and those from economically disadvantaged families.
By investing in long-term relationships and community power before a crisis arrives, Cradle to Career Network members like Elevate are positioned to help families act when the moment comes.
A program of United Way of the Blue Mountains, Elevate is a cross-sector community partnership serving the Walla Walla region with a mission to strengthen the educational pipeline from cradle through career. Its work spans kindergarten readiness, middle school engagement and postsecondary access and success.
Elevate’s community advocates had spent the past year and a half building trust on the ground, facilitating parent and student advocacy groups directly connected to Prescott School District. They established trust, deepened relationships and mobilized the community. Prescott School District shows what that looks like in practice.
Our vision is for every child in our region to have the opportunity to succeed from cradle to career. In Prescott, that meant making sure the families with the most at stake had the support.
Christy Lieuallen, executive director of United Way of the Blue Mountains
Walla Walla, Washington
Local Context
Prescott School District sits in the rural southeast corner of Washington state and serves two communities about 20 miles apart. Prescott Proper is a small farming town with deep generational ties to the district. Vista Hermosa is a migrant farmworker community connected to First Fruits Farms, one of the region’s largest agricultural employers. Vista Hermosa families make up roughly 85% of the district’s student population.
Despite sharing a school system for generations, the two communities had long operated at a distance that was shaped by geographic separation, cultural difference and years of broken trust. About a decade earlier, Vista Hermosa shared, a period of racial discrimination led the community to step back from school leadership resulting in a community board seat sat empty for five years.
Then came the financial crisis. In 2021, the district reported a $2 million budget surplus. By 2024, it had accumulated nearly $1.8 million in debt from unpaid bills, credit cards and loans. High staff turnover, poor accounting practices and a backlog of unpaid taxes had hidden the problem for years. When the Washington Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) stepped in, the full scope of the problem came into focus. Soon after, the district’s superintendent resigned and long-time teacher, coach, and principal, Jeff Foertsch, stepped up and assumed role of both superintendent and principal.
OSPI set three conditions to avoid dissolution: sell off major assets, pass a community levy and secure adequate state funding. Underlying all three was a community that, until recently, had not been part of the civic processes that would determine the outcome.
Meeting that third condition would eventually require action at the state level. State Senator Perry Dozier, a Prescott alumnus with deep ties to the community, would play a central role in securing that support.
Vista Hermosa families were also being left out of key conversations. Board meetings relied on Zoom captions that failed to accurately translate spoken English, effectively shutting out the Spanish-speaking parents who made up the majority of the district’s families. Many didn’t learn the full severity of the situation until August or September 2025.
My son is only 13 years old and instead of thinking about his studies, he asks me what will happen if his school closes — the place where he saw his brother graduate and where he also dreams of graduating one day.
Parent, Prescott Unified School District
Prescott, Washington
For those parents, the weight of that uncertainty was deeply personal. As one mother described it, she felt afraid for her children, for their education and for their future. “My son is only 13 years old and instead of thinking about his studies, he asks me what will happen if his school closes — the place where he saw his brother graduate and where he also dreams of graduating one day.”
Elevate had worked with Prescott School District for years, primarily on college access and postsecondary success. In 2024, a grant from the Washington Student Achievement Council (WSAC) expanded that work, creating resources to build real relationships with Vista Hermosa and other migrant communities in the region. That investment laid the groundwork for everything that followed. “Our vision is for every child in our region to have the opportunity to succeed from cradle to career,” said Christy Lieuallen, executive director of United Way of the Blue Mountains. “In Prescott, that meant making sure the families with the most at stake had the support and the voice to shape what happened next.”
Strategy and ImpactStrategy and Impact
Grounded in Community, Elevated to Policy
The path from crisis to resolution didn’t happen by accident. It was the result of intentional and sustained work that began long before the financial emergency became public. This work centered the families with the most at stake and built the relationships that would make collective action possible.
What we witnessed was a powerful community coming together with courage and determination to protect the well-being, stability and academic future of their students. Today, these parents are not just participants; they are advocates and trusted voices.
Felipe Salazar, community advocate at United Way of Blue Mountain and Elevate
Walla Walla, Washington
Elevate approached the challenge in three connected ways: building trust with Vista Hermosa families, developing their capacity to advocate for themselves and connecting community power to the policy levers that would ultimately determine the district’s fate.

Mobilized to act, Vista Hermosa families show up at the next Prescott School Board meeting in a BIG WAY to advocate against the dissolution of Prescott School District.
From Community to Capitol
The foundation Elevate had built extended beyond the school board. In January 2026, Elevate partnered with Children’s Alliance to send two Vista Hermosa community members to Olympia for Children’s Alliance’s “Have a Heart for Kids” advocacy day, one of the first times Vista Hermosa families had engaged at the state capitol on behalf of their school. That same month, Elevate and their partners organized meetings with the State Superintendent, state legislators, the Washington Education Association director and the governor’s K-12 senior policy director. Parents gave testimony. Elevate delivered a letter signed by more than 200 community members.
One of OSPI’s conditions for avoiding closure was the sale of major district assets. The historic Teacher’s Cottage, a building that had housed educators and administrators for generations before transitioning into district office space, became that asset. Rather than lose it entirely, the City of Prescott, Walla Walla County and the Port of Walla Walla pooled resources to purchase it, keeping it in community hands. Plans to modernize and repurpose the site are now in motion, preserving a piece of Prescott’s educational heritage while helping secure its future.
For the levy campaign, Elevate researched what would happen to local tax rates if the school closed. If students were transferred to neighboring Waitsburg or Burbank school districts, property owners in Prescott would actually pay higher school taxes, which would be $2.50 and $2.13 per $1,000 of property value compared to Prescott’s projected rates of $1.72 in 2026, growing to $2.00 by 2028.
The message was straightforward: voting no meant losing the school and paying more. Elevate turned that finding into a simple color-coded map and shared it with voters. Vote yes, the school stays open and your taxes stay lower. Vote no, the school closes and your costs go up. The math was hard to argue with. The levy passed with 87% of the vote.

Prescott Superintendent, Jeff Foertsch (pictured right) smiles after seeing voter support for school levy. The local levy passed with an 87% YES vote.
The Legislation That Made It Possible
Meeting OSPI’s third condition required action in Olympia. Two bills passed during the 2026 session completed the picture.
Senate Bill 5998, the 2025-2027 supplemental budget bill, gave Prescott School District $640,000 in direct state funding — the financial foothold the district needed to show OSPI a credible path forward.
Senate Bill 6065 addressed a structural problem affecting small districts well beyond Prescott. Under previous law, districts under financial oversight had limited ability to move money between internal accounts, leaving them few tools to manage short-term cash problems without making things worse. For Prescott specifically, the district was required to repay $400,000 it had loaned from its own transportation fund, a burden that threatened to undo much of the progress it had made. SB 6065 gave districts in these situations more flexibility to manage transfers and maintain balanced budgets. This changed the rules for rural districts across Washington facing similar constraints.

State Senator Perry Dozier, a Prescott alumnus, was key to keeping both bills moving through the legislative process. United Way of the Blue Mountains served as fiscal sponsor for the community’s “Buy a Brick” fundraiser, enabling electronic donations for a rural community without that infrastructure and raising more than $200,000.
The Parent Teacher Organization (PTO), born out of this effort as a way to unite Vista Hermosa and Prescott proper families around their shared investment in the school, had spent months planning “A Night for the Kids” gala. What started as a bridge-building effort had grown into something tangible. The March 2026 event raised $47,000 for the school’s general fund and fully established the PTO as a permanent force in the community.
“Our PTO didn’t just fundraise, we united a community,” said PTO President Ashleigh Tiedemann. “From a fall festival to a gala, community yard sale to comedy night, live music events to silent auctions and partnerships like our Lions Club Santa breakfast, every effort became a thread weaving people together for a single purpose: saving our school”.

Prescott PTO Taskforce presents funds raised from the Night for the Kids Gala to superintendent Jeff Foertch in support of Prescott school district’s general fund.
Future Vision
Sustaining the Power Built By Families
In April 2026, Prescott School District officially avoided closure. The school is open and the work continues.
Being part of the StriveTogether network made a tangible difference in how Elevate was able to move. “It reinforced the importance of using data, centering community voice and aligning efforts across systems,” Heather said. “We leaned on StriveTogether staff for guidance on advocacy strategies, messaging and navigating state-level systems. It also helped us connect to key partners and decision-makers more quickly than we could have on our own, which was critical given the urgency of the situation.”
Beyond that immediate support, their StriveTogether network advisor helped turn the rapid response into lasting change by building out a broader family engagement strategy and connecting the newly elected school board member from the Vista Hermosa community with the training and development resources they needed.
Elevate’s community advocacy effort is now in phase two. The goal is to transition leadership of the monthly parent advocacy group to families themselves, parents who are ready to run meetings, engage the district and mobilize their community whether or not outside funding continues. Elevate recently surveyed Vista Hermosa families on what would help them participate more in school life, including when board meetings should be scheduled to fit farmworker hours. That feedback is now shaping next year’s calendar.
The PTO, formed from a first meeting between leaders from two communities, is continuing its work to restore the student programs that were cut during the financial crisis and raise ongoing support for the district.
Elevate’s work in Prescott confirmed something the Cradle to Career Network has long understood, which is that local partnerships matter most, but they cannot do this work alone. Statewide relationships helped connect a small rural district to the right people at the right time, data made the case and community trust got it to the finish line. And when families who had been once left out were included, they changed what was possible.
The stakes were never just financial. “For students experiencing adversity in the world we live in, school stability is not a luxury — it is a protective factor,” Heather said in testimony to OSPI on behalf of Elevate and Prescott families. “Disrupting that stability carries real social-emotional consequences, particularly at a time when families and communities are already navigating significant uncertainty across the nation.”
What began as a fight to save one school became something larger, a demonstration that community power, when properly supported, can reshape policy and rewrite what rural families are told is possible.

