1 / 25

Budget Work Session

Budget Work Session. May 4, 2009. Board Budget Policy. Board Policy 6220 requires the Board annually to direct the administration to commence development of the ensuing year’s budget by adoption of a resolution and budget development parameters. Policy states these parameters shall:

Télécharger la présentation

Budget Work Session

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Budget Work Session May 4, 2009

  2. Board Budget Policy • Board Policy 6220 requires the Board annually to direct the administration to commence development of the ensuing year’s budget by adoption of a resolution and budget development parameters. • Policy states these parameters shall: A. Identify financial goals and objectives the Board requires in regard to specific cost reduction, revenue increases or other financially related objectives for particular budget elements.   B. Identify budget related strategies the Board prefers the administration pursue or avoid.   C. Be as specific as possible in terms of objectives, but allow for flexibility in administration's approach to budget development.

  3. Guiding Principles • Primary function of the GPPSS is to ensure the educational development of each and every student who attends our schools • The district will: • Prepare a budget for 2009-10 which provides educational excellence for each student, yet is responsive to realities of the current financial environment and anticipated state school aid • Maintain a responsible level of fund equity • Utilize a series of financial reports to identify trends and reflect best practices

  4. Budget Assumptions The district anticipates a $5.4 million shortfall under the following assumptions: • Student enrollment will decrease by 142 students • State Foundation allowance payments will decrease by $59 per pupil (offset by 2-year stimulus funding) • 20J funding will remain at its current level • The State established public school employee retirement rate (MPSERS) will increase from 16.54% to 16.94% • Employee insurance benefit costs will increase 5% • Employee bargaining unit contracts dictate salary increases based on years of service to the district and/or post-graduate credits/degrees earned (average increase in teacher compensation due to step/degree/benefits is approximately $4,500) • No enrollment variations account

  5. State of Michigan SummaryPer Pupil Foundation Amount

  6. Short history of budget cuts • Restructuring the middle school day • Past early retirement incentives • Health care savings/reduction in usage and prescriptions • Reductions in facility repair and maintenance • Moving school board elections to November • Technology initiatives (refurbished machines, etc.) • Fees for secondary clubs and sports • Privatizing cafeteria services • Hold harmless millage and sinking fund • Increasing energy efficiency • Increasing class sizes until 2006 • Eliminating fourth grade instrumental music • Reducing the athletic budget by $450,000 • Reducing purchased services by over $500,000 • Reduction of central office staff

  7. Focus Areas in Board’s 2009-10 Budget Parameters • Adjusting the District Staffing to Enrollment Ratio • Review of Special Education Services • General Operational Cost Efficiencies or Revenue Enhancements • Long-Term Financial Solutions

  8. Adjusting Student to Staff Ratio • Return to 18.6:1 student to teacher ratio from 2006-07 • Enrollment projection for 2009-10 is 8,193 students – a decrease of 452 students from 2006-07 levels

  9. Adjusting Student to Staff Ratio

  10. Adjusting Student to Staff Ratio Layoff list impacted by these factors: • Teachers returning from leaves • Job shares reduced from 6 to 4 • Actual kindergarten enrollment not projections used for staffing • Shift to core classes in secondary scheduling • Wayne RESA special education staffing reduction (reduce one teacher of the cognitively impaired and 3 teachers of autistic students)

  11. Current teacher layoff list(layoffs do not reflect program cuts or changes in services) • 26 Elementary teachers • Specials - 3 art, 5 music, 3 elementary library, 2 PE • 2 Spanish teachers • 1 language arts specialist • 6 English teachers • 1 Social Studies teacher • 1 high school science teacher • 5 middle school science teachers • 1 computer teacher • 2 high school math teachers • 1 industrial arts teacher • 1 speech teacher • 14 special education staff

  12. Review Special Education Services • Area of additional savings/revenue in previous budget cycles as a result of changes in enrollment and IEP requirements • Closing of Children’s Home

  13. Cuts/Revenue Enhancements A. American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (stimulus) • Stimulus funding is for 2 years • Supplement not supplant • Title I and Special Education focus • Unlikely to see construction funds B. Recommended Cuts

  14. Parameter One - continued

  15. Parameter One

  16. Parameter Two

  17. Parameter Three

  18. Other options considered Revenue • Enrollment of children of employees – rejected by Board • Additional cell towers • Shared teachers with private/parochial – not cost effective • Increase fees for athletics, change fee structure Expenditures • Additional clerical and classroom assistant reductions • Decrease support for struggling learners • Retirement incentive • Delay technology purchases on Tech Plan • Eliminate all field trips • Decrease sub costs-minimizing curriculum/school improvement work • Close individual schools during holiday/vacation breaks • Reduce number of athletic teams • Reduce summer school program Fund Equity

  19. Importance of general fund equity • June 30, 2008 $20,236,957 (18%) • June 30, 2009 (projected) $19,493,728 (18%) • June 30, 2010 (projected) $19,493,000 (18%) • Necessary for borrowing between our fiscal year and the State’s • Within Michigan School Business Officials’ 15-20% recommended range • Equates to only three months of school district expenditures, similar to savings recommended for individual family budgets

  20. Cuts/Revenue Enhancements What we are NOT proposing • Eliminating Community Education (programs and staffing will be reduced) • Eliminating extracurricular and high school sports • Increasing class sizes above 2006-07 levels

  21. Proposal for Community Education • All classes advertised in the Spring Summer brochure will run as scheduled. • This fall, we will continue to run our aquatics programs, Safety Town, and a few other classes that directly support our instructional program which are not currently offered by other local organizations. • We are working cooperatively with other community organizations to maintain course offerings in the community. • Staffing and registration will be handled at the administration building, with an emphasis placed on increasing online registration and payments.

  22. High school athletics, extracurricular, co-curricular • Restore a portion of the accompanist for designated classes during the school day and for performances • Consider changes to fee structure for athletics

  23. Four key concepts • Excellent education requires a budget which provides for a well prepared staff, a rich variety of offerings, and well maintained facilities; the law requires the budget be balanced • Wise stewardship requires appropriate fund equity and cannot rely upon the two-year, targeted stimulus funds • Cost containment requires confronting expenses which outpace revenues • The Board will continue its cooperative relationship with all employee groups

  24. Future Meetings • Work Session of the Board, 6 p.m., Monday, May 18, North High School • Regular Meeting of the Board, 8 p.m. Monday, May 18, North High School • Budget Hearing and Adoption, 8 p.m. Monday, June 22, North High School

  25. Comments • Email schoolboard@gpschools.org • Mail Superintendent’s Office, 389 St. Clair, Grosse Pointe 48230 • Call 313/432-3010 • Watch www.gpschools.org & Channel 20/902 for updates

More Related