District Unveils Revised Budget By Ann K. Williams June 21 -- Comparing it to a Polaroid photo that is “going to become crisp,” School District officials last week unveiled a revised $107 million budget for fiscal year 2005-06 that will meet the State's June deadline. A 100 percent accurate, computer-refined version of the budget -- which reserves $94 million for employee salaries and benefits -- will be presented to the School Board Friday for final approval and adoption, district officials said. "As you shake it, it's going to become crisp," Winston A. Braham, assistant superintendent for Fiscal and Business Services told the board last Thursday, adding that the budget is becoming more precise with every revision. The $107,808,524 the District plans to spend under the latest 2005-06 Proposed General Fund Budget would pay for the following:
But while school officials are busy crunching numbers, it is not yet
clear exactly how much "We're doing well" compared to other districts in the state, said Superintendent Dr. John E. Deasy. The budget is balanced and the District will be able to fund all its programs, meet all its reserves and maintain student achievement for another year, Deasy added. According to the proposed budget, the District expects to take in $106,575,502, most of it from the following sources:
As usual, the California budget -- on which the District budget depends -- is far from being adopted, and education funding promises to be a subject of hot debate in Sacramento this summer. While Democrats in the State Legislature have said they would take education funding off the table for now, hanging over the budget deliberations is the special November election recently called by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. "The special election is the most significant issue in school funding in the past thirty years," Deasy said a few days after the meeting. "I can't even speculate what November will bring." The big initiative on the November ballot is the "Live Within Our Means Act" which supporters say will cap spending to ensure the State's fiscal health. Its opponents in the education community counter that it will "gut" Proposition 98 -- the law which guarantees a minimum level of funding for California schools. In the meantime, the District must "plan and prepare," basing its numbers on the proposed State budget. The Board will adopt a budget after a public hearing on Friday, June 24 at 4:00 p.m. in the school District Office board room at 1651 16th Street. The District's final budget will be submitted on June 27 to the County Board of Education, which will send it on to the State after it is approved. The next regular school board meeting will be held on Thursday, July 28 at 5:30 p.m. in the District Office board room. |
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