Chronic Absenteeism: Washoe County Cannot Afford to Ignore the Crisis

Chronic Absenteeism is no longer simply an education issue. It is an economic development issue, a public safety issue, a workforce issue, and ultimately a taxpayer issue.

Michael Leonard

May 13, 2026

The number of students chronically absent from school in Washoe County remains one of the county’s least discussed long-term economic and social threats. While the public debate often focuses on housing, homelessness, crime, and workforce shortages, a quieter problem is unfolding in Washoe County classrooms.

Even five years after the pandemic, chronic absenteeism remains stubbornly high. Washoe County continues to rank among the worst in the state for chronic absenteeism, with roughly one in four students missing school.

According to Nevada Department of Education data presented to the State Board of Education, Nevada’s chronic absenteeism rate remains at around 25%, placing it among the states with the highest absenteeism.

What Chronic Absenteeism Means

Chronic absenteeism is not simply another word for truancy. Truancy refers to unexcused absences and focuses on disciplinary or compliance issues. Chronic absenteeism measures all absences — excused, unexcused, suspensions, illness, mental health days, transportation problems, or family instability.

A student is considered chronically absent when they miss 10% or more of the school year — roughly 18 days in a standard 180-day school year. Students who miss 20% or more of the school year are considered severely chronically absent.

The definition matters because the consequences are the same regardless of why a student is absent. If students are not in class, they are not learning. The Washoe County School District notes that chronic absenteeism directly impacts reading proficiency, academic performance, and graduation rates.

Approximately 27% of students in Washoe County—about 15,000 children—are chronically absent, missing an average of 33 school days each year. Not because they don’t care, but because they face barriers that make it challenging to show up to school. Click the image to learn more from WCSD.

Washoe County’s Numbers Are Alarming

Washoe County has made progress since the peak pandemic years, but the numbers remain deeply troubling. During the pandemic, chronic absenteeism in Washoe County reportedly surged from approximately 13% to nearly 37%.

Link: See this chart from the Blueprint Collaborative for steps to reduce chronic absence.

While attendance has improved since then, the district still faces extraordinarily high levels of absenteeism. According to presentations provided to the Nevada State Board of Education and community organizations earlier this year:

  • WCSD students classified as chronically absent miss an average of 32 to 33 school days per year.

  • Roughly 27% of WCSD students were chronically absent in 2025.

  • High school absenteeism remains especially severe.

  • Middle schools and elementary schools have shown improvement, but many campuses continue to struggle.

To put this into perspective, missing 33 days of school means students are effectively losing nearly two full months of classroom instruction every year.

WCSD officials told the Nevada State Board of Education that for every 1% reduction in districtwide chronic absenteeism, the district regains approximately 15,250 instructional days. That is not an abstract statistic. That is lost teaching time, lost learning momentum, and lost opportunity.

Chronic Absenteeism in Washoe County is still above the pre-pandemic level. Click the image to see more in this report by the State Board of Education.

The Long-Term Economic Cost

The fiscal implications are staggering. A recent Applied Analysis study examining chronic absenteeism estimated that the lifetime economic costs of current absenteeism trends could exceed $20 billion statewide over the next two decades.

Those estimates include:

  • Lower lifetime earnings

  • Reduced tax revenue

  • Higher Medicaid utilization

  • Increased reliance on public assistance

  • Higher incarceration costs

  • Greater housing insecurity

  • Reduced workforce productivity

The economic consequences compound over time. Students who struggle academically due to absenteeism are less likely to graduate; those who do not graduate face dramatically lower lifetime earnings and reduced job stability.

Research consistently shows that chronically absent students are far more likely to drop out of school.

According to research cited by WCSD and community organizations:

  • Chronically absent students in early grades are significantly less likely to read at grade level by third grade.

  • Chronically absent high school students are seven times more likely to drop out.

  • High school dropouts are substantially more likely to experience unemployment, poverty, incarceration, and homelessness.

The connection between absenteeism and future instability is no longer speculative. The data has become overwhelming.

Link: Chronic Absenteeism State Board of Education

See this report from the State Board of Education for causes of chronic absenteeism.

Why Are Students Missing So Much School?

There is no single explanation. The pandemic fundamentally altered how many families and students view school attendance. Before COVID, attendance was generally treated as mandatory.

During remote learning and school disruptions, many students became disconnected from school routines, and in many cases, that mindset never fully recovered. But the causes run much deeper.

School officials and community groups point to a wide range of contributing factors:

  • Housing instability

  • Poverty

  • Food insecurity

  • Transportation barriers

  • Mental health struggles

  • Lack of childcare

  • Illness

  • Family instability

  • Students falling behind academically

  • Social disengagement

  • Safety concerns

This Is Bigger Than The School District

One of the most important points emerging from recent discussions is that schools cannot solve this problem alone.

WCSD officials and community organizations repeatedly emphasize that chronic absenteeism is not simply a school problem. It reflects broader community conditions.

When families struggle with housing, transportation, childcare, healthcare access, addiction, or financial instability, attendance suffers.

A Northern Nevada task force examining absenteeism recently identified multiple community priorities that could improve attendance, including:

  • Expanding Family Resource Centers

  • Providing trusted adults or site coordinators at schools

  • Improving transportation access

  • Expanding before- and after-school programs

  • Increasing mental health support

  • Helping students avoid falling behind academically

  • Better connecting families with available resources

The underlying message is clear: absenteeism is often a symptom of broader family and community instability.

Pay Now Or Pay Later

Washoe County faces a choice. We can invest now in attendance interventions, family supports, school engagement programs, and early intervention systems, or we can absorb far higher costs later through increased crime, higher welfare utilization, reduced workforce participation, lower tax revenues, and growing homelessness.

The uncomfortable reality is that chronic absenteeism has long-term consequences that extend far beyond the classroom. The students who disappear from school today will eventually become the adults struggling tomorrow. That is why this issue deserves far more public attention than it currently receives.

A community cannot sustain long-term economic growth while one in four students is effectively disengaging from education. The fiscal warning signs are already visible.

The question now is whether policymakers, community leaders, and taxpayers are willing to treat chronic absenteeism as the long-term economic emergency it has become.

This article originated from a conversation with Mike Kazmierski, executive director of Strengthen Our Communities, a 501(c) nonprofit, and is supported by a donation from the organization. I encourage people who share these concerns to contact them.

Support Reno independent journalism. Click to donate to: Mike’s Reno Report.

Next
Next

A Discussion with Summer Pellett and the Issues Facing Reno Ward 2