Britton project breaks ground after six-month delay
After a six-month delay, plus a change in the nearly $40 million work order, the Britton Middle School Transformation Project finally broke ground June 5 in front a modest crowd of Morgan Hill Unified School District staff, school site faculty, school board trustees and Bobcat student band members.
Test scores up districtwide
More than half of Morgan Hill's students met federal standards
Candidates announced for MHUSD board appointment
Two former school district board members, a retired school administrator, a charter school board president and four other local parents have thrown their names in the hat for the vacant seat on the Morgan Hill Unified School District’s Board of Education.
Students bring holiday cheer to seniors
Middle school students from Mount Madonna School were able to spread some holiday cheer for local residents on Dec. 13 by singing a free holiday concert at the Morgan Hill Senior Center. The students sang a selection of holiday carols and handed out cookies...
District to discuss dual-immersion program Wednesday
Morgan Hill Unified School district has dual-immersion and an independent study charter in mind.
Teachers request pay raise from MHUSD
“It’s spring time. It’s negotiations time. It’s time to show the teachers the respect they deserve.”
District invites more public comment on Peet Road project
A public hearing on the district’s Mitigated Negative Declaration of the Peet Road property will be conducted at the Aug. 1 school board meeting, less than a week after the state’s Department of Toxic Substances Control held a public forum detailing the cleanup plan for the future home of S.G. Borello Elementary School.
UPDATE: Attorney General, K12 Inc. disagree on terms of settlement
A for-profit online charter school operator agreed to pay back about $160 million debt relief to its 14 affiliated nonprofit schools known as the California Virtual Academies over alleged violations of California’s false claims, false advertising and unfair competition laws, according to the Attorney General's Office.














