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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Tax
vote will have an impact on schools The fiscal sky
over Sisters will not fall if Measure 28 fails. Nonetheless, the fate of
the measure at the polls this month will make a difference to Sisters' public
schools.
It will have much less impact
on the City of Sisters.
Measure 28 was placed on the
January 28 ballot by the Legislature, meeting in special session last
September. It proposes a small, temporary (three-year) tax increase that
would make up $310 million worth of cuts in the current state general
fund budget.
The cuts will take effect
if voters say no to Measure 28. These are the latest cuts the Legislature
has ordered in response to falling state revenues this biennium, although
they won't necessarily be the last.
Because Oregon schools rely
on state funding to cover about two-thirds of their operating expenses,
the $310-million reduction at issue now includes $95 million scheduled
to be taken from the amount originally budgeted for schools.
Sisters' piece of that is
about $185,000.
But as School Superintendent
Steve Swisher explains, the Sisters School Board anticipated further shrinkage
in state funding when the 2002-03 school year began last fall. As a precaution,
the board delayed the opening of school by four days.
Losing those four days will
save the district $130,000 this year. This, combined with other, smaller
reductions will mean that if voters reject Measure 28 most of the $185,000
bill here will have already been paid.
Not quite all. It might be
necessary to consider cutting a fifth day from the 171 days originally
scheduled. Swisher says that's uncertain.
The money saved by shortening
the school year is actually the smaller rather than the greater part of
economizing steps the schools have taken to accommodate state funding
reductions this year.
The district's general fund
budget for 2002-2003 stands at $7.9 million, down half-a-million dollars
from the $8.4 million of the year before. Savings have been achieved by
eliminating four positions from the instructional staff, three through
attrition and one through a direct layoff. The custodial staff has been
reduced by three-fourths of a position and administrative costs have been
squeezed by giving principals more teaching duties.
Shortening the school year
by four days effects savings in a simple and direct way -- everyone on
the payroll, from the superintendent down, loses four days' pay.
Many school districts plan
to take similar steps if Measure 28 fails.
A mail survey by the Oregon
School Boards Association in late December indicated that 55 of the 105
districts responding were planning to cut days.
The Bend-La Pine district,
Sisters' educational big sister, is talking about cutting five days.
Won't this loss of school
time get districts in trouble with the state, which sets minimum standards
for a variety of things? Apparently not.
Swisher says Sisters always
has a cushion of a few days to be used for unexpected closures -- usually
weather-related.
A four-day cut will drop Sisters
right to the minimum requirement of instructional hours for the year.
Cutting an additional fifth day would put the district over the line.
However, the State Department
of Education has indicated that because of the statewide fiscal problem
it will be lenient in granting all districts waivers from the minimum-time
requirement this year.
What if voters surprise the
pollsters and professional "observers," something that happens fairly
often, and approve Measure 28? Oregon school officials will be happy,
but in Sisters they will face another decision: where to put the four
days that would be restored to the schedule.
Two possibilities exist --
spring vacation or the end of the school year.
Next to the public school
system, city government is probably the most visible entity of state or
local government in Sisters.
How will City Hall be affected
if Measure 28 goes down the tube in this month's election? The answer
is clear: very little.
The reason is equally clear:
The city doesn't depend on the state general fund for much of its financial
support.
According to City Administrator
Eileen Stein, the city was originally scheduled to receive $7,750 this
fiscal year (2002-2003) in what is called state-shared revenue. This money
comes from the state general fund.
But it represents a very small
part of the city's own $1.7 million general fund budget. And the city's
general fund, in turn, constitutes only a small portion of the overall
city budget, in which all funds combined add up to $11.3 million.
So even if state-shared revenues
for cities were eliminated as a result of the failure of Measure 28, neither
Stein nor anyone else associated with city government would lose any sleep
over it. |
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