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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. |
Redmond
students could ease budget woes Redmond students
may help ease Sisters' school budget pains next year.
The reason is that 15 or 20
students who live in the Redmond area may transfer to Sisters schools
in 2003-04. The students will carry with them the money all districts
receive from the state on the basis of enrollment.
Schools receive about $5,000
per student this year and will probably get about the same next year.
Thus, 20 students added to Sisters' enrollment would increase the district's
revenue by $100,000.
Sisters Superintendent Steve
Swisher anticipates a $240,000 budget hole next year.
The governor has recommended
a $200-million increase in the state's allocation for public schools in
the next biennium. But with the latest news of an ever-growing revenue
shortfall in the current biennium, Swisher says "now we (Oregon schools)
might be lucky to get the $4.8 billion we currently have. So ultimately
the schools are looking at being flat-funded for the next biennium."
Nonetheless, schools must
cope with normal inflation of a variety of costs. Swisher figures that
pressure will increase the district's total operating expenses by 3 percent.
"On an $8 million budget,
that's like $240,000. And so somewhere in that neighborhood is probably
what we'll end up having to cut in our district just to keep the status
quo."
Some of the necessary reduction
will be gained through attrition -- retirements or resignations of administrators,
classified employees and teachers, some of whom may not be replaced.
But if Sisters gains 20 more
students from Redmond, that will take care of nearly half the anticipated
problem. Natural enrollment increase from within the district's own boundaries
will also help.
Why the sudden expectation
of more students from Redmond? Because the Redmond School Board has changed
a policy that in the past strongly discouraged transfers of students out
of the district.
Under the old policy, the
board would not approve the transfer of any Redmond student to another
district unless a student from the receiving district wanted to transfer
to Redmond.
This "one-for-one" rule minimized
transfers. No Redmond students have entered Sisters schools under the
policy this year and only two who came in previous years are currently
enrolled. (Once in, students have been allowed to stay in their new district.)
The policy did not prevent
parents from moving their children to a different district by paying tuition,
but that costs $546 per month. Five tuition-paying students from Redmond
are enrolled in Sisters schools this year.
The clear impetus for the
Redmond board's policy change is serious school overcrowding. Redmond's
schools are over capacity and the district has failed in two attempts
to win approval for bonds to finance the construction of new schools or
school additions.
The most recent bond failure
means "it's probably going to be a good four to five years before any
new schools can be built," Redmond Superintendent Jerry Colonna said.
"We realize that we have to look at a variety of other things so one way
we're going to ease the overcrowding is to allow that (making it easier
for students to transfer out of the district.)"
Colonna says he is expecting
about 50 students to transfer out of his district in the coming year,
15 to Sisters and the rest to Bend. While his estimate of the Sisters-bound
group is slightly lower than Swisher's, both superintendents will have
a clearer idea of the true number by April 1.
That's the deadline the Redmond
board has set for parents to submit written requests for a transfer for
next year. There have been about 13 students on the waiting list for Sisters
this year.
Even with a more lenient policy,
transfers will not be automatic. The receiving district must grant permission
for a student to enter a particular school at a particular grade level.
And parents or guardians must provide transportation.
Bend may be reluctant to accept
additional students in some schools at some grade levels because of crowding.
Sisters could run into the same problem at the elementary level, but it
expects to have plenty of room for extra students in the high school and
middle school. The district will open a new, larger high school this fall
and middle school students will move into the existing high school building.
Colonna acknowledges that
the restrictive transfer policy has been motivated by fear of losing state
revenue.
"It was about money," he said.
But even though the district
will lose $250,000 if his estimate of 50 transfers proves accurate, the
Redmond superintendent says he has always philosophically supported a
more open policy. He notes that in Central Oregon only Sisters and Bend
have had open policies; Redmond, Madras and Prineville (Crook County)
have not.
Redmond is a large and geographically
diverse district. Besides the City of Redmond, it takes in the communities
of Crooked River Ranch, Terrebonne, Eagle Crest, Alfalfa and Tumalo. It
has about 6,100 students, compared with 1,100 in Sisters.
Despite his endorsement of
the new transfer policy, Colonna notes that the change is not necessarily
permanent.
"Right now, it's a one-year
trial. While we wouldn't pull people back who did this (next year), we
might say we can't do it any longer...We may have to choose what's the
worst of two evils, overcrowding or underfunding. In our school district
we're going to have to deal with both of those next year." |
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