Menu

Highline Public Schools
15675 Ambaum Blvd. SW Burien, WA 98166

Office Hours:

Monday-Friday: 7:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Highline Public Schools
15675 Ambaum Blvd. SW Burien, WA 98166

You Are About To Leave the Highline Public Schools Website

You are now leaving the Highline website and will be redirected to a third-party application or website. This site may have advertisements or other content not necessarily endorsed or approved by Highline Public Schools. 

Capital Facilities Advisory Committee

Public schools belong to the entire community, and funding for capital improvements is generated though voter-approved bond measures.

It is essential community members help develop our long-term capital facilities plan so it reflects the values and priorities of the community. 

In September 2015, Highline convened the Capital Facilities Advisory Committee (CFAC) to develop recommendations for a long-term capital facilities plan. CFAC met monthly for a year to study facilities needs, review data and develop a plan designed to meet the needs of students over the next 20 years. The committee's work culminated in a bond measure on the November 2016 ballot and a working list of future priorities. Voters approved the 2016 bond with a yes vote of nearly 67 percent.  

CFAC paused its meeting schedule during the first year of the Covid pandemic, and Highline pivoted to run a successful two-year technology levy, approved by voters at more than 74 percent. In the spring of 2022, CFAC reaffirmed 2019 recommendations for a Phase 2 school construction bond with a revised cost. Voters approved the 2022 bond (Phase 2) at an approval rate of 68.8 percent. 

CFAC entered its seventh session of committee work in the 2023-24 school year to continue work on prioritizing our remaining 10 older school buildings.

What Has CFAC Accomplished?

CFAC is valued as a standing committee to advise district leaders on capital planning and boundary recommendations. CFAC also elects two members to sit on the Oversight Committee to review capital projects and bond spending in progress. 

For more information on CFAC work:

CFAC 2023-24 | Community Recommendations for Future Facilities (Priority List Review)

CFAC 2022-23 | Community Recommendations for Future Facilities (Priority List) - Continued

CFAC 2021-22 | Community Recommendations for Future Facilities (Priority List) - Continued

CFAC 2019-21 | Community Recommendations for Future Facilities (Priority List)

CFAC 2018-19 | Phase 2 Bond Recommendations & Long-Range Capital Facilities Planning

CFAC 2017-18 | Boundary Change Recommendations

CFAC 2015-16 | Phase 1 Bond Recommendations & Long-Range Capital Facilities Planning

How Are CFAC Members Chosen?

Municipalities, community organizations and staff labor organizations each appoint one member, plus each of our four comprehensive high schools each appoint one student, for about 20 appointees. The remaining 20+ members are community volunteers. Each session, we invite community members to enter their names in a lottery for open committee seats. We draw names from geographic service areas in our district to ensure balanced representation.

CFAC News

27 members and staff of the Capital Facilities Advisory Committee  in group photo

Our community-led Capital Facilities Advisory Committee (CFAC) held its first meeting of the 2022-23 school year on Wednesday, September 28, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at the district central office. Read a meeting summary and learn more about planning for future bonds to rebuild other aging schools.

Read More about Capital Facilities Advisory Committee Kicks Off 2022-23 Session to Plan for Future School Construction