The Texas Association of School Boards, the state group representing the state鈥檚 1,024 public school boards, has severed its ties with the National School Boards Association.
The move came late Monday night, three days after an revealed the national body contacted the Biden administration weeks before it last fall in which it requested federal assistance at school board meetings.
That investigation showed that the NSBA had planned to ask for the National Guard and the military to be sent to school board meetings. But that request never made it into the final letter that NSBA officials sent on Sept. 29 to the White House.
In the letter鈥檚 final version, the national group asked Biden officials to investigate threats against school board members by people who attend school board meetings as 鈥渄omestic terrorism,鈥 prompting immediate criticism from Republicans.
鈥淲e have been intently waiting for the release of this independent investigation for nearly two months,鈥 TASB Executive Director Dan Troxell said in a statement. 鈥淲ith this report now available, it鈥檚 clear that NSBA鈥檚 internal processes and controls do not meet the good governance practices that TASB expects and requires in a member organization.鈥
At the time, the Sept. 29 letter from NSBA to the Biden administration received swift condemnation from Republican lawmakers and conservative parent groups across the country. NSBA launched the internal investigation in February after it lost members and brought in new leadership.
In March, Texas Attorney General joined more than a dozen Republican attorneys general and in March to force it to release correspondence with NSBA leaders related to the letter.
Texas is the latest organization to announce it is leaving the national group. The Washington Post reported last year that 22 other states have created a new group, called the .
A TASB spokesperson said the organization has no plans to join that group. Troxell declined an interview request through the spokesperson.
The move by the state school board group comes after months of criticism from conservative parents and political officials over how schools and their elected boards have handled pandemic-related policies regarding student and teacher mask mandates and whether schools should close to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.
Last fall, Texas schools began feeling more heat on how they stock their library shelves, particularly when it comes to books about race, sex and gender and how they discuss racism in classrooms. A that went into effect last year prohibits teachers from discussing 鈥渁 widely debated and currently controversial issue of public policy or social affairs.鈥
On Nov. 1, TASB officials found themselves the recipient of a from Gov. asking them to take a more direct approach in keeping 鈥減ornography or other inappropriate content鈥 from school shelves. At the time, the organization said it was confused by the letter because the group is not a regulatory agency.