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Federal Way Public Schools, Washington, elections

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Federal Way Public Schools
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District details
School board members: 5
Students: 21,818 (2023-2024)
Schools: 46 (2023-2024)
Website: Link

Federal Way Public Schools is a school district in Washington (King County). During the 2024 school year, 21,818 students attended one of the district's 46 schools.

This page provides information regarding school board members, election rules, finances, academics, policies, and more details about the district.

Elections

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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1

Eric Gollings and Steve Gorringe ran in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1 on November 4, 2025.

Candidate
Eric Gollings (Nonpartisan)
Steve Gorringe (Nonpartisan)

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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4

Jim Dalke and Trudy Davis ran in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4 on November 4, 2025.

Candidate
Jim Dalke (Nonpartisan)
Trudy Davis (Nonpartisan)

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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2

Jennifer Jones and Daniel Kukhar ran in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2 on November 7, 2023.

Candidate
Jennifer Jones (Nonpartisan)
Daniel Kukhar (Nonpartisan)

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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3

Christopher Dowllar and Luckisha Phillips ran in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3 on November 7, 2023.


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Per our coverage scope, Ballotpedia does not provide election results for this particular race. Check your city or county government's election website for vote totals.

Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5

Gavin Downing and Joan Marie Murphy ran in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5 on November 7, 2023.

Candidate
Gavin Downing (Nonpartisan)
Joan Marie Murphy (Nonpartisan)

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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1

Incumbent Geoffery Z. McAnalloy won election in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 1 on November 7, 2017.

Candidate
Image of Geoffery Z. McAnalloy
Geoffery Z. McAnalloy (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4

Incumbent Carol Gregory won election in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 4 on November 7, 2017.

Candidate
Image of Carol Gregory
Carol Gregory (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2

Incumbent Claire Wilson won election in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 2 on November 3, 2015.

Candidate
Image of Claire Wilson
Claire Wilson (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3

Incumbent Liz Drake won election in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 3 on November 3, 2015.

Candidate
Liz Drake (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5

General election

General election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5

Incumbent Hiroshi Eto won election in the general election for Federal Way Public Schools school board District 5 on November 3, 2015.

Candidate
Image of Hiroshi Eto
Hiroshi Eto (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Election rules

 

Election dates and frequency

See also: Rules governing school board election dates and timing

School board nonpartisan primary elections in Washington are held on the first Tuesday in August every two years in odd-numbered years. School board primary elections are only held if more than two candidates file to run for a school board member seat. If only two candidates run, the primary is canceled and both candidates advance to the general election.

School board general elections in Washington are held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November every two years in odd-numbered years.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 29A.52.220 and RCW 29A.04.311 and Washington Statute RCW 29A.04.330

Recent or upcoming election dates for all public school districts in the state

Below are the recent/upcoming dates for all public school districts in the state. There may be exceptions to these dates for specific districts because of local charters and district-specific exceptions and carve-outs.

  • Filing deadline date: May 16, 2025
  • Primary election date: August 5, 2025
  • General election date: November 4, 2025

Election system

School board members in Washington are elected through a system of a nonpartisan primary election and a nonpartisan general election. School board primary elections are only held if more than two candidates file to run for a school board member seat. If only two candidates run, the primary is canceled and both candidates advance to the general election.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 29A.52.220 and RCW 29A.52.210

Party labels on the ballot

See also: Rules governing party labels in school board elections

School board elections in Washington are nonpartisan, which means party labels do not appear on the ballot for school board candidates. Washington statute specifies partisan and nonpartisan offices. Washington has a top-two primary system, which means all candidates appear on the same primary ballot regardless of party affiliation. The top-two candidates advance to the general. For partisan races, candidates can but do not have to express a preference for a political party. If they do, the ballot specifies their party preference. For nonpartisan races, candidates cannot express a party preference. RCW 28A.343.330 states that, "the positions of school directors and the candidates therefor shall appear separately on the nonpartisan ballot."

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 29A.52.210 and RCW 28A.343.330

Winning an election

The school board candidate that receives the largest number of votes in the general election is elected to office.

The top two school board candidates with the most votes in the nonpartisan primary advance to the general election. If only two candidates file for the primary election, the primary will be canceled and they will automatically advance to the general election. School board primary elections are only held if more than two candidates file to run for a school board member seat.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 28A.343.010 and Washington Statute RCW 29A.04.127

Term length and staggering

Elected school board members in Washington have four-year terms, except for school districts classified as first-class school districts containing a city of the first-class in a county with a population of two hundred ten thousand or more, can have their board of directors serving six-year terms. As of 2022, only Spokane, Tacoma, and Everett School Districts serve 6-year terms.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 28A.343.300 and RCW 29A.04.340

Washington school districts have staggered elections based on the rule that not more than a majority of board members can be elected at any election. This means that for all districts with four-year board member terms, as close to half of board members as possible are elected every two years. Four years is the default board member term length. As of 2022, Spokane, Tacoma, and Everett school district board members serve six-year terms with as close to one-third of board members up for election every two years.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 28A.343.300 and 28A.343.600

Representation: at large vs. by sub-district

School board members are elected at large, by district, or through a combination of the two, depending on the classification of the school district. Any school district in the state that has a student enrollment in its public schools of two thousand pupils or more is a school district of the first class. Any other school district is a school district of the second class.

Most school districts classified as First Class Districts can elect their school board members either entirely at large or entirely by sub-districts.

School districts classified as Second Class Districts must elect their school board members either at large or by director districts (sub-district). Districts opting for a combination of board members elected by sub-district and at large generally must have three members elected from sub-districts and two members elected at large.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute 28A.343.02028A.343.680, and 28A.300.065 and Washington Statute 28A.343.020 and 28A.343.680 and Washington Statute 28A.343.680

Filing deadlines and swearing-in dates

The school board candidate filing deadline is on the Friday following the Monday that is two weeks before Memorial Day. This means the filing deadline is 74 days before the August primary and 172 days before the November general election.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 29A.24.050

School board candidates cannot submit declarations of candidacy until the filling window opens on Monday two weeks before Memorial Day. This means the filing window opens 78 days before the August primary and 176 days before the November general election.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 29A.24.050

Newly elected school board members officially take office at the first board of directors meeting taking place after the results of the election have been certified.

DocumentIcon.jpg See law: Washington Statute RCW 28A.343.360

 


About the district

School board

Federal Way Public Schools consists of five members serving four-year terms. To find information about school board meetings, click here.

List of school board members
NameSeatYear assumed officeYear term ends
Joan Marie MurphyDistrict 520232027
Jennifer JonesDistrict 220192027
Luckisha PhillipsDistrict 320182027
Quentin MorrisDistrict 120212025
Trudy DavisDistrict 420182025

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District map

Overlapping state house districts

The table was limited to the lower chamber because it provides the most granularity. State house districts tend to be more numerous and therefore smaller than state senate or U.S. House districts. This provides an impression of the partisan affiliations in the area.

Budget

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[1]

Revenue, 2021-2022
SOURCE AMOUNT AMOUNT PER STUDENT PERCENT
Federal: $69,617,000 $3,294 15%
Local: $78,471,000 $3,713 17%
State: $314,871,000 $14,897 68%
Total: $462,959,000 $21,904
Expenditures, 2021-2022
TYPE AMOUNT AMOUNT PER STUDENT PERCENT
Total Expenditures: $463,149,000 $21,912
Total Current Expenditures: $361,885,000 $17,121
Instructional Expenditures: $200,866,000 $9,503 43%
Student and Staff Support: $63,106,000 $2,985 14%
Administration: $40,338,000 $1,908 9%
Operations, Food Service, Other: $57,575,000 $2,724 12%
Total Capital Outlay: $59,914,000 $2,834
Construction: $47,900,000 $2,266
Total Non El-Sec Education & Other: $3,766,000 $178
Interest on Debt: $17,835,000 $843

Academic performance

Each year, state and local education agencies use tests and other standards to assess student proficiency. Although the data below was published by the U.S. Department of Education, proficiency measurements are established by the states. As a result, proficiency levels are not comparable between different states and year-over-year proficiency levels within a district may not be comparable because states may change their proficiency measurements. To protect student privacy, percentages are reported as ranges for groups of 300 students or fewer. If five or fewer students were included in a data set, the data will display as "PS."[2]

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 23 32 15 14 11-19 27 36
2018-2019 35 47 20 24 25-29 36 48
2017-2018 35 47 20 25 20-29 36 49
2016-2017 36 49 20 25 20-29 35 49
2015-2016 37 51 21 26 35-39 36 48
2014-2015 39 50 23 28 35-39 36 49
2013-2014 54 64 37 40 45-49 47 66
2012-2013 57 71 40 43 45-49 52 68
2011-2012 59 70 41 44 45-49 54 70
2010-2011 58 68 38 43 50-54 53 68

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 38 43 31 30 20-29 43 51
2018-2019 47 58 34 38 45-49 50 60
2017-2018 47 58 32 37 50-59 48 61
2016-2017 48 57 32 37 30-39 49 62
2015-2016 53 62 39 41 45-49 50 65
2014-2015 46 56 33 35 40-44 43 59
2013-2014 68 74 56 56 65-69 65 78
2012-2013 69 77 60 55 65-69 65 78
2011-2012 69 75 60 57 60-64 65 79
2010-2011 69 74 59 58 55-59 66 77

The following table shows the graduation rate of district students each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 84 90 85-89 81 >=50 85-89 83
2019-2020 84 90 80-84 82 >=50 80-84 84
2018-2019 87 93 85-89 85 PS 85-89 85
2017-2018 91 92 85-89 90 >=50 >=95 92
2016-2017 83 86 80-84 79 >=50 80-84 85
2015-2016 80 86 75-79 69 >=50 75-79 85
2014-2015 78 84 75-79 68 >=50 80-84 80
2013-2014 76 81 70-74 62 >=50 75-79 81
2012-2013 73 82 70-74 60 >=50 70-74 76
2011-2012 70 75 60-64 58 60-79 70-74 76
2010-2011 72 77 65-69 55-59 40-59 60-79 79

Students

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[3]

Year Enrollment Year-to-year change (%)
2023-2024 21,818 1.0
2022-2023 21,606 2.2
2021-2022 21,136 -3.0
2020-2021 21,765 -7.0
2019-2020 23,289 -0.9
2018-2019 23,489 1.6
2017-2018 23,110 0.3
2016-2017 23,043 0.0
2015-2016 23,039 2.3
2014-2015 22,501 0.0
2013-2014 22,499 1.2
2012-2013 22,231 -0.2
2011-2012 22,279 0.1
2010-2011 22,258 3.9
2009-2010 21,390 -4.9
2008-2009 22,440 0.2
2007-2008 22,398 -1.6
2006-2007 22,759 -1.0
2005-2006 22,978 1.6
2004-2005 22,609 0.3
2003-2004 22,538 0.4
2002-2003 22,449 -0.8
2001-2002 22,636 0.1
2000-2001 22,623 0.7
1999-2000 22,472 0.0
Racial Demographics, 2023-2024
RACE Federal Way Public Schools (%) Washington K-12 STUDENTS (%)
American Indian/Alaska Native 0.4 1.1
Asian or Asian/Pacific Islander 13.6 8.9
Black 15.6 4.8
Hispanic 33.1 26.1
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 6.0 1.5
Two or More Races 11.3 8.9
White 19.8 48.3

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

Staff

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[4]

As of the 2023-2024 school year, Federal Way Public Schools had 1,210.15 full-time classroom teachers. The student-teacher ratio was 18.03.

Teachers, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF TEACHERS
Prekindergarten: 16.00
Kindergarten: 96.14
Elementary: 579.42
Secondary: 518.59
Total: 1,210.15

Federal Way Public Schools employed 18.34 district administrators and 78.83 school administrators as of the 2023-2024 school year.

Administrators, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF ADMINISTRATORS
District Administrators: 18.34
District Administrative Support: 30.99
School Administrators: 78.83
School Administrative Support: 116.61
Other staff, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF OTHER STAFF
Instructional Aides: 224.99
Instruc. Coordinators & Supervisors: 142.12
Total Guidance Counselors: 58.19
Elementary Guidance Counselors: 21.86
Secondary Guidance Counselors: 36.33
Librarians/Media Specialists: 15.19
Library/Media Support: 0.00
Student Support Services: 110.87
Other Support Services: 415.99

Schools

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[5]

Federal Way Public Schools operates 46 schools. They are listed below in alphabetical order.
List of schools
SCHOOL NAMENUMBER OF STUDENTSGRADES
Adelaide Elementary School319PK-5
Birth To Three Development Center0PK-PK
Brigadoon Elementary School359PK-5
Camelot Elementary School293PK-5
Career Academy At Truman High School729-12
Decatur High School1,3549-12
Dynamic Family Services0PK-12
Employment Transition Program579-12
Enterprise Elementary School424PK-5
Evergreen Middle School7376-8
Federal Way High School1,6459-12
Federal Way Public Academy3036-10
Federal Way Public School Eceap321PK-PK
Federal Way Public Schools Headstart0PK-PK
Federal Way Running Start Home School311-12
Gateway To College129-12
Green Gables Elementary School320PK-5
Illahee Middle School6225-8
Internet Academy391PK-12
Kilo Middle School6496-8
Lake Dolloff Elementary School486PK-5
Lake Grove Elementary School357PK-5
Lakeland Elementary School417PK-5
Lakota Middle School6186-8
Mark Twain Elementary School537PK-5
Meredith Hill Elementary School437PK-5
Mirror Lake Elementary School487PK-5
Nautilus K-8 School469KG-8
Olympic View Elementary School474PK-6
Open Doors Youth Reengagement (1418)1719-12
Panther Lake Elementary School422PK-5
Rainier View Elementary School523PK-5
Sacajawea Middle School6526-8
Sequoyah Middle School5346-8
Sherwood Forest Elementary School357PK-5
Silver Lake Elementary School381PK-5
Star Lake Elementary School413PK-5
Sunnycrest Elementary School527PK-5
Support School61PK-12
Technology Access Foundation Academy At Saghalie5376-12
Thomas Jefferson High School1,7869-12
Todd Beamer High School1,4139-12
Twin Lakes Elementary School369PK-5
Valhalla Elementary School536PK-5
Wildwood Elementary School566PK-5
Woodmont K-8 School407KG-8


About school boards

Education legislation in Washington

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See also

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External links

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  • Footnotes