A little more than week after the election of Donald Trump, who campaigned on a pledge to deport millions of undocumented immigrants, Portland Public Schools is weighing whether to formally put limits on federal immigration officers' access to schools while also training staffers to help undocumented families.

The proposal lands in the midst of an ongoing and controversial debate over immigration policy. Beyond Trump's call for mass deportations, the Republican president-elect has said he wants to build a wall along the Mexico border and end a temporary relief program for young adults brought into the country illegally.

The resolution, which went online late Wednesday and is set for a school board vote Thursday, doesn't mention Trump by name.

But its language is urgent, calling on the superintendent to have a plan within 90 days for training teachers on how to respond if immigration agents show up at schools asking about students. That training would include guidance on how to support students with family members who have been deported.

Although the resolution reflects a fear that federal agents will begin searching school records and pulling kids from classrooms next year, there's no indication this is imminent or even possible.

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act prevents schools from turning over a student's immigration status to federal agents.

The resolution says immigration employees must notify the district of their presence. It also allows for the superintendent and the district's lawyer to demand credentials and "evidence of reasonable suspicion." Enforcement agents must provide written authorization to enter the school and an explanation of why they must enter a school, the resolution says.

On Tuesday, interim Superintendent Bob McKean told families incidents of hate speech had "risen significantly" since Trump's election. The election has put schools around the nation on edge as reports of racist bullying seemingly increase and administrators field questions about whether the Trump administration will change their child's education.

Portland's fears are not unique. In February, the Los Angeles school board passed a similar resolution to keep immigration agents off school grounds and out of student data, according to the Los Angeles Times. That resolution also gave the superintendent a 90-day window to put a plan in place.

In Denver, the school district released a fact sheet on immigration relations to soothe anxious families, the Denver Post reported.

-- Bethany Barnes

@betsbarnes