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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
School
budget plan maintains services Superintendent
Steve Swisher on Monday night, May 5, proposed a 2003-04 Sisters school
budget that would keep the level of service about the same as the current
year.
If his scenario comes true,
the schools will spend $8.4 million, 5.7 percent more than the $7.9 million
being spent this year after cuts caused by state funding reductions. The
increase would primarily go for negotiated salary and benefit increases
for teachers and other staff members.
At the first school budget
committee of the year, Swisher said his projection of state funding for
next year might not come true. Therefore, he urged the committee to set
broad priorities for up to $600,000 in cuts in case the final numbers
out of Salem are unkind.
Ozzie Rose, executive director
of the Confederation of Oregon School Administrators, is estimating that
the Legislature will provide school funding of slightly more than $5 billion
for the next biennium (2003-05).
Gov. Ted Kulongoski originally
recommended $5.05 billion but has revised his suggestion upward to $5.5
billion. The co-chairs of the Joint Ways and Means Committee have suggested
only $4.8 billion. And more conservative members have been talking about
$4.6 billion.
A state appropriation of $4.6
billion would leave Sisters more than $600,000 short.
With that in mind, the superintendent
offered the committee a list of four possible clusters of spending cuts,
each of which would reduce spending by about $200,000: increasing class
size by a systemwide average of two students per class (allowing the elimination
of 3.5 teaching positions), severely reducing funding of co-curricular
activities, primarily sports; cutting music, art and foreign language
instruction; and reducing the school year by six days of instruction.
Committee members took special
note of the fact that the next school budget is assured of one very important
chunk of revenue -- $700,000 from the "local option" tax approved by district
voters in November 2000.
This four-year levy is in
its second year. |
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