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©
2003 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. |
Impasse
leaves schools in dark There
is a pretty good chance that Sisters will
start its school year without knowing how much money the district will have
to operate.
As the Oregon Legislature
slogs through a record-length session with no budget to show for it, the
Sisters School District has put hiring plans on hold.
"We are leaving a couple of
positions unfilled right now," said School Superintendent Lynn Baker.
Those positions are in language
arts and math and science, both at Sisters High School.
"If we don't have a budget,
we'll have to leave those positions unfilled, which will result, for a
time, in larger class sizes," Baker said.
There are some signs that
a budget agreement may finally come from an exhausted legislature, but
Baker said he has heard nothing but unconfirmed rumors.
The Sisters School District
based its budget for 2003-4 on a state education budget of $5.0 billion.
Baker said there is some hope for a $5.2 billion budget, which would allow
the unfilled positions to be filled.
Hiring so close to the school
year -- or after it starts -- is not ideal. However, Baker noted, other
districts, too, have been unable to make hiring decisions in the face
of an uncertain budget.
"The good thing is, we're
all in the same boat," he said.
Anything lower than $5 billion
in state allocations would likely lead to cuts.
Baker said he is strongly
opposed to lopping days off the calendar to make up any deficit. The district
cut five days last year.
"I really don't want to do
that again," Baker said. "It's an option, but an option I'd like to avoid."
It's an option the district
may face again, depending on the final state allocation. There isn't any
room to spare in the current year's budget.
"From what I understand talking
with our business manager, this year is as lean as we've been," Baker
said. "We have no wiggle room."
Despite a tight budget, Sisters
schools are in better shape than most, due to nearly $700,000 per year
infused into the budget by local option taxes approved by Sisters voters
in November 2000.
Baker described those funds
as "absolutely critical." Without local option, Sisters schools would
face deep program cuts. Local option expires in 2004 and Baker said the
district is already laying the groundwork to go back to voters. |
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