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Why Purpose Still Matters in Public Education

By Dr. Heather Contreras, Superintendent, Pajaro Valley Unified School District

Public education in California is facing a defining moment. Across the state, school districts are confronting a difficult mix of rising costs, declining or shifting enrollment, and long-standing structural challenges.

Pajaro Valley Unified School District is no exception.

Heather Contreras

These realities require difficult conversations and responsible decisions, often under intense public scrutiny. Yet in moments like this, it is essential to step back and reflect on our purpose: What is the purpose of public education, and how do we protect it when resources are limited? At Pajaro Valley Unified School District, public education is about student learning and growth supported by belonging, opportunity, and hope.

Our schools exist to nurture the whole child, academically, socially, and emotionally, while preparing students for college, careers, and meaningful lives. We believe every student deserves to be seen, supported, and challenged to reach their full potential.

By keeping students at the center of every decision and working hand in hand with families and community, PVUSD fulfills its mission to educate, inspire, and empower every learner to thrive. That is our purpose.

For generations, public schools have been far more than places where students gain academic knowledge. They are places where students develop civic engagement skills, learn how to communicate, collaborate, resolve differences, and engage thoughtfully with others.

As one of the few institutions that bring young people together from diverse backgrounds and perspectives, schools prepare students to think critically, participate responsibly, and understand their role in a shared community. This civic purpose, preparing students not only for careers, but for informed participation in a democracy, has always been central to the mission and outcomes of public education.

In recent decades, education has often focused on competition and narrow measures of success. While outcomes matter, this approach can obscure the broader purpose of schools: to serve as a public good. Strong schools strengthen communities, provide stability, opportunity, and trust for all.

Budget constraints do not change that purpose. In fact, they sharpen it.

Responsible stewardship means valuing education with clarity and care, especially in moments of limited resources. Acting thoughtfully today helps prevent deeper, more disruptive challenges tomorrow and honors the confidence our students, families, and community place in us.

When resources are abundant, it can be easy to expand programs or structures without fully examining alignment or long-term sustainability; when resources are limited, every decision carries weight, and every dollar must serve students as directly and effectively as possible.

Equally important is how we act, through open communication, sincerity, and genuine engagement, even difficult conversations can strengthen and grow that confidence, while avoiding them only weakens it. This moment demands clarity about what we value most, and the discipline to protect it.

In the coming years, I am committed to guiding our district with clarity, care, and purpose.

My focus will be on stabilizing our long-term finances, strengthening teaching and learning, especially literacy, expanding meaningful career pathways and real-world learning opportunities for students, and rebuilding systems so our schools are well-supported, responsive, and student-centered.

Just as important, I am committed to leading with sincerity, listening closely, and working in partnership with staff, families, and our community as we navigate change together.

For Pajaro Valley Unified, this means realignment and reorganization guided by student needs, fiscal responsibility, community vision and current realities. Declining enrollment requires us to take a thoughtful look at how our schools are structured and how resources are distributed.

That includes reviewing staffing, programs, and, where necessary, school facilities, including the possibility of school closures. These conversations are never easy, and they must be approached with care, clarity, and meaningful community input. Decisions of this magnitude cannot be made in isolation; they must reflect both budget realities and the voices of families, staff, and the broader community.

These are not abstract exercises. They translate into real, human decisions that affect employees, students, and neighborhoods. That reality deserves sincerity, empathy, and respect. Realignment is not about retreating from our mission; it is about ensuring that our systems are organized in ways that best support students today and in the future.

This moment comes at a time when our democracy faces significant challenges. Polarization, misinformation, rise of incivility, and rapid technological change are reshaping how young people engage with the world. Schools remain one of the most vital spaces for teaching students to think critically, participate thoughtfully, listen to diverse perspectives, model respect, and act with empathy. Fostering these skills is essential to preparing the next generation of active, informed citizens.

Public schools have evolved alongside our democracy, adapting to new social and economic realities while holding fast to core values. Today is another such moment. While financial pressures are real, they do not define who we are. Across Pajaro Valley Unified School District, students continue to learn, educators continue to innovate, and schools remain places of growth, possibility, and imagination.

Doing more with less is not a slogan. It is a responsibility that requires courage, discipline, and partnership. By staying anchored in purpose, by keeping students at the center of every decision, we can navigate this moment with integrity and position our schools for a stronger, more sustainable future.

Our students deserve nothing less.

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