FORT BEND COUNTY, Texas – Dozens of parents and community members spoke up against rezoning plans at Fort Bend Independent School District before the Fort Bend ISD Board of Trustees during a monthly board meeting on Monday evening.
While rezoning was not on the agenda for Monday’s meeting, parents spoke during the public comment section of the meeting.
KPRC 2 spoke to parents Teresa Noyola and Sanjuanita Franco, who have 7th graders who attend Quail Valley Middle School.
Both parents spoke against the district’s redistricting plans on Monday night.
“I moved here five years ago and I literally went and did my homework,” said Franco.
Franco tells KPRC 2 that her child attended a will charter school in the Dallas area.
“So when I moved here and put them into a public school setting, I wanted to make sure they were going to have the best education,” said Franco.
Right now, the 7th graders are on track to go to Elkins High School.
“We just want our input to be heard as parents, because we are partners in education, along with the teachers and staff at the schools and administration,” said Noyola.
One parent, who says she is frustrated, is Tressy Garcia.
A Fort Bend ISD alum and mother of five, Garcia says her family has been rezoned three times in five years.
“Unfortunately, our kids are not able to form a community because after elementary school, they are divided into two different middle schools. Now we are thinking about rezoning our middle schools and our neighborhoods to two different high schools,” Garcia said.
Garcia and her husband bought their Riverstone home in 2018. Within a year, they were rezoned. It’s happened twice more since then.
“We had to rent a home. This is in the COVID bubble years. We had to rent a home for one year and decide where we wanted to live so we wouldn’t be rezoned again, keep the kids together, and now the rezoning is back on the table after having lived in our house for two years,” she said.
She says the biggest stress isn’t just where her kids will go, but how their daily routine willrezoning even work.
“So for me personally, I have rising 9th graders next year. And unfortunately, if we’re rezoning high schools, that would mean that I would have one child at Elkins High School and two children at another high school. And I’m not sure, because Fort Bend ISD has not been transparent in what their plans are, how the transportation would look for that,” she said.
She also points to overcrowding at Elkins High School.
“We currently have Elkins High School sitting at 112% capacity, and so they’ve built 13 portables outside, which are not safe, which are not secure, and are really hard for the kids to get to,” Garcia said.
KPRC 2 asked Garcia what questions she would like to ask the district.
“I would love to know why they continue to kick the can down the road, what is causing the delay in letting us know the boundary scenarios, and I’d love to know why certain communities have always been targets of the rezoning, while others have stayed untouched,” she responded.
The district says draft boundary scenarios won’t be released until January 2026, with time for families to give feedback before any recommendations go to the Board in the spring. District leaders were not available for an interview Monday, but released this statement:
Fort Bend ISD is committed to ensuring every student learns in an environment that is safe, supportive and designed for long-term success. As FBISD enrollment begins to stabilize across the district, we are conducting a long-range boundary planning process. This is a multi-year planning process designed to balance enrollment across our campuses over time.
We are committed to a transparent process that includes meaningful input from our families, staff, students, and community members. As part of this work, the District will share draft boundary scenarios with the public in January 2026, providing ample opportunity for feedback before any recommendations are finalized and presented to the Board of Trustees for consideration in early spring.
FBISD looks forward to continued collaboration with our community as we work together to build a strong and sustainable future for Fort Bend ISD.