Every date below is sourced to a document a specific email, text message, or public record. Dates marked CPRA 26-083/084/086 come from California Public Records Act requests filed by Gerrit Warren Bleeker, PTA President of Thurgood Marshall High School.
Board President Tina Fredericks prepares a "Consolidation 2027" presentation before any public process is announced, before TSS is hired, and before any community input. She later describes it as "not intended for the public."
Octavio Castelo, Director of Business Advisory Services at the Los Angeles County Office of Education (LACOE), formally warns PUSD of a $149.4 million three-year deficit a "toughif not impossiblefinancial conundrum." LACOE sets December 15, 2025 as a critical deadline and threatens county intervention or state trustee takeover if PUSD fails to demonstrate action.
After the public board presentation, a text message sent to Harden on October 21 reports that Fredericks had been privately meeting with LACOE officials: "Tina said she has been 'stalking' the LACOE guys who came to our meeting (her word!). She has spoken to Octavio more than once it sounds like and had a zoom call with them!! Topic - her plans for consolidation. They said that we would be pleasantly surprised about the plans of our staff." The text does not name Castelo explicitly "Octavio" is identified by context as the LACOE official who had been presenting to the board. These private discussions happened outside any public meeting, without public notice.
On a Friday night, Fredericks emails District 1 Trustee Kimberly Kenne: "Can you send me the documentation from previous consolidations which would show examples of which positions would be duplicative? Can you send those by Monday please?" No public process exists yet. TSS has not been hired.
Kenne sends Fredericks board meeting data on school site costs and principal salaries. She then forwards the entire exchange to Scott Harden with the note: "FYI A Tina request and my response."
Fredericks emails the "Consolidation 2027" presentation to board member Dr. Yarma Velázquez, describing it as "not intended for the public but as a visual aid."
Materials for the November 6 Board Retreat include a draft "Optimal Size Resolution," AB 1912 requirements, a state letter on school closures, and CSBA self-evaluation results. The resolution framework that will later authorize the consolidation process is already being circulated.
Superintendent Elizabeth Blanco sends a memo marked "Conf Memo/Attorney Client Privilege: AB 1912" to Sarine Abrahamian, an attorney at Orbach, Huff & Henderson PUSD's law firm. The memo lays out the district's legal obligations under AB 1912 for any school closure process.
The night before a scheduled TSS meeting, Fredericks forwards Blanco's AB 1912 memo to Harden, writing: "If you want to know what Dr. Blanco is thinking about school consolidation, she lays it out plainly in the attachments." She adds that Blanco "is good at following rules" and will follow AB 1912 framing the superintendent as a predictable variable, not a decision-maker.
In the same email, Fredericks reveals that TSS was referred to her by someone named "Mr. Dunning" connected to LACOE, the Los Angeles County Office of Education.
TSS President Tahir Ahad not yet formally contracted emails Fredericks: "I think it would be best to not mention our discussions to the superintendent and let her own the process." He recommends she use "School Reconfiguration" and "School Optimization" rather than "closures."
Text messages show Harden being alerted that Thurgood Marshall High School families had already begun contacting the district with closure concerns months before the community was officially told Marshall was under consideration.
Total School Solutions is approved as the consolidation consultant. Documents show contact between Ahad and Fredericks began at least a month before the formal contract vote.
The board votes 4–3 to adopt Resolution 2852, "Establishing Optimal School Sizes" the resolution that formally authorizes a school consolidation process. YES: Harden (moved), Velázquez (seconded), Kenne, Marshall McKenzie. NO: Hall Lee, Richardson Bailey.
The board votes 5–2 to retain Total School Solutions as the consolidation consultant. YES: Harden, Velázquez, Fredericks, Kenne, Marshall McKenzie. NO: Hall Lee, Richardson Bailey.
More than 300 parents, students, educators, and community members rally outside Pasadena City Hall ahead of the March 15 preliminary layoff notice deadline and March 16 fiscal plan submission to LACOE. The rally is organized by United Teachers of Pasadena (UTP) and draws support from U.S. Representative Judy Chu and CA Assemblymember Mike Fong while the board majority continues the consolidation process.
In a text message, Harden writes: "I'm plotting to close San Raf because I think locating schools where kids live is important and we tricked her into voting for the resolution so we could make changes to it after the fact." San Rafael Elementary had not been named in any public consolidation materials at this time.
The board votes 5–2 to formally authorize the Superintendent's School Consolidation Advisory Committee (SCAC) desired outcomes. YES: Fredericks, Harden, Kenne, Marshall McKenzie, Richardson Bailey. NO: Hall Lee, Velázquez.
A PUSD parent emails all seven board members documenting that the TSS-designed consolidation survey is structured to produce a predetermined outcome: Questions 7–11 repeat the same pro-merger framing, and the final question presents consolidation positively while alternatives are framed negatively. "It feels like I'm being forced towards one answer."
PUSD announces a virtual town hall on the consolidation process with two days' notice, scheduled during traditional work hours. A parent writes to Hall Lee and Harden: "It feels as if the district is designing these opportunities for minimal participation availability." Harden responds that he is "advocating" for better timing while his own texts show him privately plotting specific school closures.
The TSS-designed community survey closes with 2,384 responses. TSS packages results showing "65% support" school mergers but the headline number comes from a conditional statement: respondents who said they would support merging if it maintains programs and improves facilities. On every consolidation question, approximately 29–30% of respondents chose a version of "I do not believe this benefit will happen." The survey never asks about specific school closures and never names Thurgood Marshall, Blair, or San Rafael. Thurgood Marshall respondents (412) outnumber every other school in the district. The survey PDF is authored by "TSSAdmin" Total School Solutions, the same firm that designed the questions.
Gerrit Warren Bleeker PTA President of Thurgood Marshall High School files California Public Records Act request 26-083, seeking all communications between Harden, Kenne, and Velázquez about consolidation and Resolution 2852. He files a follow-up on March 25. The documents that emerge will become the basis for public accountability.
Total School Solutions presents to the community in Spanish and English. The presentation shows PUSD has lost 3,950 students 23% since 2015. The SCAC committee process is presented as an open, data-driven review. The private coordination behind it is not mentioned.
Bleeker files CPRA 26-086, specifically requesting all communications between Orbach, Huff & Henderson (PUSD's law firm) and Total School Solutions, and all documents related to TSS and specifically to TSS Executive Vice President Joseph Pandolfo.
Nearly 100 parents, students, and community members rally outside PUSD headquarters holding signs reading "Fewer schools = fewer opportunities" and "No school closures." Marshall Secondary School, Blair High School, and Altadena Arts Magnet are among the schools under active closure consideration. The board majority continues to support the process.
At the SCAC meeting, TSS Executive Vice President Joseph Pandolfo acknowledges that projected cost savings for proposed school closures were inaccurate. He states the projections used incorrect data and did not account for the $24.5 million in budget reductions the board had already approved in November 2025.
Colorado Boulevard publishes its investigative report documenting the pre-contract TSS contact, serial board member communications, the "Consolidation 2027" presentation, and Harden's statements to Marshall parents alongside his private text messages.
The PUSD board holds required public hearings on the proposed closures. Any closures approved would take effect for the 2027–28 school year.
The PUSD board is scheduled to take a final vote on school closures. The public record includes the emails, text messages, and CPRA documents released through records requests filed in March and April 2026.