When something truly significant is being discussed at a school board meeting, a certain kind of tension arises. Not the typical calendar changes or budget shuffles, but a structural reevaluation of a district’s self-governance.
When Lisa Mott, the assistant superintendent of Waxahachie ISD, appeared before the board of trustees to discuss proposed changes to the district’s District of Innovation Plan, that was, by most accounts, the mood. It wasn’t very loud. Seldom is it. However, it seems that the issues being discussed in this Ellis County district have far-reaching effects outside of the boundaries of Waxahachie.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| District Name | Waxahachie Independent School District (Waxahachie ISD) |
| Location | Waxahachie, Ellis County, Texas, USA |
| District Type | Public School District |
| DOI Plan First Adopted | 2022 |
| Most Recent Amendment | June 2025 |
| Governing Framework | Texas Education Code (TEC), Chapter 12A — Districts of Innovation |
| Enabling Legislation | H.B. 1842, 84th Texas Legislature |
| Oversight Authority | Texas Education Agency (TEA) |
| Key Administrator | Lisa Mott, Assistant Superintendent |
| Plan Duration Limit | Maximum 5 calendar years per designation |
| Reference Resource | TEA District of Innovation Page |
| Exemption Scope | Instructional calendars, grading practices, operational policies |
| Legal Guidance Required | Yes — districts must consult their own legal counsel |
The District of Innovation framework was never intended to be a loophole. It was created during the 84th session of the Texas Legislature under H.B. 1842. It was intended to serve as a pressure valve, a formal mechanism that permitted school districts to choose not to comply with certain Texas Education Code provisions when those provisions actually interfered with their ability to serve students. It made sense.
The unique rhythms of any one location cannot always be accommodated by state law, which is designed to apply uniformly across hundreds of districts that span farming communities, suburban sprawl, and dense urban centers. Waxahachie’s DOI Plan was first adopted in 2022, revised in June 2025, and is currently undergoing additional revisions. This pattern suggests either extraordinary institutional ambition or an understanding that the initial framework required more work than expected. Maybe both.

It’s not just the policy mechanics that make Waxahachie’s current revision push intriguing. The timing is the issue. Districts are forced to either stay up to date or lag behind due to the rapid pace of Texas education legislation. New interpretations, carve-outs, and prohibitions are introduced during new legislative sessions.
To its credit, the TEA has been open about its own limitations in this regard; it does not authorize innovation plans, does not direct district hiring decisions made under DOI authority, and specifically advises districts to obtain legal counsel prior to claiming any exemption. That final point merits more consideration than it usually receives. In essence, districts are being told by the state, “We gave you this tool, but we are not responsible for how you use it.” Speak with an attorney.
This puts smaller districts in a subtly vulnerable position, which is difficult to ignore. With employees like Mott presenting logical, well-organized changes to a working board, Waxahachie has the administrative capability to handle that complexity. However, not all districts do.
Although the DOI framework is egalitarian in theory, districts with better infrastructure are rewarded in practice. Although it’s not specific to Texas or education policy, it’s worth considering for a little while.
The two main goals of the proposed changes in Waxahachie seem to be updating exemptions to reflect changes in the law and providing clarification on procedures that the district may have been using informally for a while. It gets interesting in the second part. Formalizing something that is effective differs from formalizing something that has always been a little unclear from a legal standpoint.
The TEA’s reserved right to investigate, intervene, and enforce—even within DOI-designated districts—is not a theoretical concern, and it is still unclear which category some of these clarifications fall into. It is a real institutional mechanism that has been put to use.
A natural checkpoint is created by the framework’s five-year designation limit. Like all innovation districts, Waxahachie will eventually need to reapply, re-justify, and possibly reorganize. That clock is important. When the next designation cycle comes around, reforms that were implemented in a favorable legislative environment may look very different.
Some education observers believe that districts are developing institutional habits related to staffing, scheduling, and instructional delivery that may be challenging to break if the DOI designation expires or if state law closes the exemption gaps they have been using.
All of this does not justify Waxahachie’s actions. If anything, a district is doing exactly what the framework was intended to support when it actively reviews and improves its innovation plan. The alternative, which is to adopt a plan and essentially leave it unaltered, results in the kind of bureaucratic fossilization that innovation frameworks are meant to avoid.
In the end, the Waxahachie experiment examines whether local districts can make prudent, lawful, and genuinely beneficial use of that flexibility for the students who enter those doors each morning. There is currently no answer to that question. But it’s worth keeping a close eye on.
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