Frankfort 157-C Considers Five-Minute Public Comment Limit for Smaller Crowds
Frankfort School District 157-C Board of Education Meeting | April 21, 2026
Article Summary: The Frankfort School District 157-C Board of Education on April 21, 2026, reached consensus to extend its public comment time from three to five minutes per speaker when six or fewer people sign up, while keeping a 30-minute overall cap, with formal policy action expected in May.
Public Comment Policy Key Points:
- The board reviewed Board Policy 2:230, which currently limits speakers to three minutes each.
- Consensus was reached to allow five minutes per person when six or fewer individuals wish to speak.
- If more than six people sign up, each will be limited to three minutes, and a 30-minute total cap remains.
- Further discussion and anticipated approval will occur at the May board meeting.
FRANKFORT — The Frankfort School District 157-C Board of Education on Tuesday, April 21, 2026, discussed loosening its public comment time limits for meetings that draw smaller crowds, reviewing Board Policy 2:230 and reaching consensus on a revised approach. The matter was a discussion item, with further discussion and anticipated approval slated for the May board meeting.
The policy currently limits each individual to three minutes during public participation at board meetings. Under the consensus reached by the board, speaking time would be extended to five minutes per person when six or fewer speakers are present, subject to a total cap of 30 minutes. If more than six individuals wish to speak, each would continue to be limited to three minutes.
The review follows a request raised at the district’s March 19 meeting, when Kociolek asked the board to consider a five-minute speaking limit during public forum. Board Policy 2:230, adopted in October 2001 and amended several times since, guarantees a minimum of 30 minutes for public participation at each regular and special open meeting.
The April 21 meeting itself featured three public forum speakers. Matt Rafacz spoke on limiting technology use in the classroom and raised concerns about its impact on student learning, screen time, and one-to-one device use. Jen Rafacz expressed support for students taking notes by hand rather than typing, citing research on stronger cognitive involvement and memory retention, and described screens as a classroom distraction. Matt Sullivan spoke about students with learning differences and asked the board to examine the tools and instruction currently in place in the district’s schools.
Latest News Stories
Frankfort Approves Pavlov Media Fiber Optic Hub Lease in Exchange for Municipal Internet Service
Everyday Economics: Housing sets the stage, but the Fed, PCE are the main event
DOJ: Shooting suspect targeted Trump admin officials
23 state AGs demand top ratings agencies explain ESG-driven downgrades
Bacon says Pentagon raided housing fund for troop bonuses, demands repayment
Will County Passes Comprehensive Adult Entertainment Ordinance
Correspondents’ dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons
BREAKING: Trump, cabinet OK after shots fired at White House Correspondents dinner
Frankfort Township Board Approves Highway Salt Purchase, Restructures Financial Signers
U.S. House Republicans face jam-packed week ahead
Trump again scraps peace talks with Iran
U.S. Supreme Court to hear TPS for Haiti, Syria Wednesday