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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. |
Board
debates funding priorities The Sisters school
budget committee Monday night adopted an $8.5 million general fund budget
for 2003-04, as proposed earlier by Superintendent Steve Swisher.
The action is relatively meaningless,
however, because the true size of the budget will be determined in Salem,
not Sisters. The district's spending for next year will depend upon the
current Legislature's school support appropriation for the next biennium.
Swisher and School Board Chairman
Jeff Smith both reported that the latest word from knowledgeable insiders
in Salem is that the Legislature will not settle on a 2003-05 school appropriation
of less than $5 billion. That's the number upon which Swisher based his
recommendation for Sisters' 2003-04 budget.
If the number approved Monday
holds up, the school district will have about 6 percent more to spend
than in the current year. Most of the increase will go for already negotiated
increases in salaries and benefits for teachers and other employees.
If the Legislature fails to
reach the $5-billion goal, however, the Sisters School Board will have
to reduce its "approved" spending plan by about $160,000 for every $100
million in state underfunding. Contemplating that possibility, at the
first budget committee session earlier this month the superintendent suggested
that the group map out priorities for cuts if they become necessary. Monday
night, the budget committee (all five school board members plus a like
number of appointed citizens) went through an exercise that left the majority's
priorities clear.
Each member (with one absence)
ranked five possible areas of cuts on a scale from one to five, with the
area to be cut first ranked No. 5 and the area to be cut last ranked No.
1. The lower the ranking, the greater the desire to protect a category
from reductions.
When the rankings were tallied,
the results showed the nine voters most inclined to cut days of instruction
(41.5 points) and least inclined to cut a lumped-together category of
music, art and foreign languages (14.5 points).
The next three categories
in order of susceptibility to cutting were class size (31.5), counseling
and nursing services (27) and co-curricular activities, including sports
(20.5).
Board member Steve Keeton
expressed surprise at the weak level of support for keeping class sizes
(student-teacher ratios) low.
"Why would you let class size
go up," he asked, when the local option levy approved in the fall of 2000
was sold mainly on the point of holding class size down?
Keeton and Board Member Eric
Dolson were the only two participants to rank class size No. 1 -- the
area they would be most reluctant to cut.
In the brief debate that followed,
fellow Board Member Glen Lasken, who gave class size a 4 and music, art
and foreign languages a 1, said, "We should do everything possible to
hold onto programs."
If sports were severely cut,
for example, he predicted that a number of students would transfer to
Bend, thus depriving Sisters schools of even more state funding.
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