"Society's norms and values evolve and the dress code we had 10 years ago is not suitable for today," said district superintendent Terry Sullivan at Monday night's (July 5) board meeting. The process in revising the dress began in December 2020, but the issue had a fire lit under it in late February of this year, when Wilson said she was sent home because a teacher told her that her outfit had made her "uncomfortable." Prior to the revisions, the dress code allowed staff to take issue with students thought to be wearing clothing that was "worn in a way that detracts from the teaching/learning process."