Alpine School District

[3] The district is governed by a board of education which consists of a seven-member group of citizens elected to four-year terms.

"[12] Following guidance from the Office of the Attorney General, "an internal library audit determined that [the questioned books] contain 'sensitive material' ... and 'do not have literary merit.

[12] In September 2023, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights sent a 21-page letter to the superintendent of Alpine School District.

In multiple cases, the offending adults were permitted to retire or resign, with no legally mandated investigation and no notes made on the teacher's license.

When most district officials failed to appear for a requested meeting with state legislators, the Administrative Rules Review and General Oversight Committee issued subpoenas compelling the testimony of superintendent Farnsworth and the entire school board.

Utah state senator Curt Bramble was paraphrased by local media as saying "it appeared as though the [school] board had made a decision and then went through the motions of studying the issue.

Proposition 11, if passed, would create a new school district consisting of Alpine, American Fork, Cedar Hills, Highland, and Lehi, as well as the Utah County portions of Draper.

Proposition 14, if passed would create a new school district consisting of Cedar Fort, Eagle Mountain, Fairfield, and Saratoga Springs.

Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, and Vineyard did not have a ballot measure and would be organized into their own district if the other cities passed Propositions 11 and 14.