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Near Death of a District: The Perfect Storm

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Near Death of a District: The Perfect Storm' School District of Florence County ... The Perfect Storm began to brew in the late 1980s. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Near Death of a District: The Perfect Storm


1
Near Death of a District The Perfect Storm
  • School District of Florence County
  • Jan Dooley, District Administrator
  • Rural Advisory Council Presentation
  • January 12, 2006

2
The Perfect Storm
3
The Beginning
  • The Perfect Storm began to brew in the late
    1980s.
  • Post employment health insurance benefits were
    added to teacher contract.
  • This benefit was a cost saving measure at the
    time and was an incentive to move higher-cost
    teachers into retirement and obtain lower cost,
    newly educated teachers.

4
Increasing Momentum in Early 1990s
  • The storm picked up momentum in the early 1990s
    when revenue caps went into effect.
  • Our district was a lean spending district in the
    base year.
  • Thus, per pupil revenue amount was set lower than
    many other districts.

5
Cool Waters of the mid 1990s
  • The intensity of the storm was calmed by cool
    waters in the mid 1990s as enrollments continued
    to increase.
  • Rising enrollments masked the monster of a storm
    that was taking shape.

6
Warm Waters of the late 1990s and Early 2000s
  • Warms waters of the late 1990s and early 2000s
    moved the storm from a tropical depression to a
    full-fledged hurricane caused by
  • Declining enrollment
  • Escalating health insurance costs
  • The ticking time bomb Post employment health
    and dental benefits
  • Low revenue limit
  • Increased fixed costs
  • Rising property values with subsequent decrease
    in state aid

7
The Perfect Storm The Causes
  • Declining enrollment Peak of 929 FTEs in
    1996-97 830 in 2001-02 636 in 2005-06 (Drop of
    32 from 1996-97 drop of 24 from 2001-02)
  • Escalating health insurance costs 39 increase
    in premiums in 2001-02 school year
  • Post-employment benefits some with health
    dental benefits until age 75 others until
    Medicare new hires none (426,000 paid in
    2004-05 projected 515,000 in 2005-06)
  • Low per pupil revenue since 1993-94 (insufficient
    to maintain adequate programming, support
    increased costs, and resume deferred spending)
    Sparsely populated county with long bus routes
    (Some runs over 3 hours per day)
  • Fund balance had dropped from 777,000 at the
    beginning of 2002-03 to 164,000 at the beginning
    of 2003-04

8
Severe Declining Enrollment
Includes 61 students on open enrollment
Includes 30 students on open enrollment
9
Escalating Health Insurance Costs
Includes auditor adjustment for two months
premium
10
The Historical Perspective Change in Revenue
Expenditures
11
The Historical Perspective Change in Fund
Balance
12
The Perfect Storm Attempted Remedies
  • Reduced personnel by 29 since 2001-02, the
    majority of which was in the last three years
    (including closing one rural elementary school)
  • Revenue dropped by 317,000 expenditures were
    reduced by 1.877 million in two years (2003-05)
  • Reductions of 1.2 million in salaries and
    benefits through personnel reductions, freezes on
    salaries (except steps/lanes), and change of
    health insurance plan with share of premium
  • 700,000 in other budget reductions most of
    which was deferred spending
  • Through 2003-05 bargaining efforts, district
    eliminated post-employment benefits for new
    hires
  • Three referendum attempts prior to dissolution
    orderMay of 2004, February of 2005, June of 2005
    Live Within Your Means Philosophy

13
Personnel Reductions
14
Change in Revenue Expenditures through 2004-05
15
The Perfect Storm Dissolution Order
  • The majority of the Board of Education believes
    that any further reductions in personnel and in
    programming will be detrimental to the education
    of the children of our district.
  • The Board of Education has limited class sizes at
    the elementary level to 25.
  • The majority of the Board of Education believes
    the students deserve to have elementary music and
    physical education taught by licensed
    specialists, rather than the classroom teachers.
  • The majority of the Board of Education believes
    the students deserve art, music, physical
    education, and vocational education at the middle
    school and high school.
  • The school district has already eliminated the
    elementary art teacher, elementary guidance
    counselor, middle school Spanish, reduced course
    offerings at the high school in Spanish (only
    Spanish I and II), Business Education and
    Technology Education, reduced the number of HS
    Special Education teachers with the remaining
    high school teacher on overload, and has moved
    the classroom portion of drivers education to
    the summer.
  • The district has no Reading Specialist,
    Curriculum Director, In-house School Nurse, or
    Principals. The elementary and MS/HS principals
    have been replaced with building supervisors,
    with the District Administrator assigned to
    teacher evaluations.
  • What do we want for the children of our district?

16
The Perfect Storm Dissolution Order
  • Our children deserve adequate programming.
  • Our children deserve to have access to
    technology.
  • Our children deserve to have updated textbooks
    and other educational resources.
  • Our children deserve to compete in athletics and
    other extracurricular activities.
  • Our children deserve to ride on safe buses.
  • Our children deserve to have an emotionally and
    physically safe environment within which to
    learn.
  • What do we want for the children of our district?

17
So Why Dissolution? What Do We Want for the
Children of Our District?
18
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19
Comprehensive School Reform -Expeditionary
Learning
20
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21
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22
Youth Teaching Youth
23
Comprehensive School Reform High Scope
24
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25
The Ever-So-Vital Extras
26
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27
Thus, Dissolution Order
  • Resolution to Consider Dissolution June 29,
    2005
  • Resolution to Order Dissolution July 11, 2005
  • The Stand for Adequate Education
  • for Our Children

28
School District Boundary Appeal Board Hearings
  • 7 member state panel, consisting of two board
    members from large districts, two from medium
    districts, and two from small districts in the
    state, plus deputy superintendent of public
    instruction
  • The panel was to either affirm or deny
    dissolution
  • Received testimony in August, September, and
    October

29
Passage of November 8 Referendum
  • 500,000 for 2005-06
  • 750,000 for 2006-07
  • 1,000,000 for 2007-08
  • 1,250,000 for 2008-09
  • 1,250,000 for 2009-10
  • Additional monies will stabilize the district as
    we address issues important to the long-term
    financial stability of our district and further
    strengthen district educational programs.
  • With the passage of the referendum, on November
    15, the SDBAB voted to deny dissolution.

30
The Fall Out
  • A Community Divided - Philosophical Differences
  • Establish the level of desired programming and
    obtain revenue to support programming
  • Force level of programming to fit current revenue
    live within your means philosophy
  • Shattering of human relationshipsthe issues of
    adequate education vs. property taxes has pitted
    neighbor against neighbor and has torn families
    apart.

31
Does the Educational Funding System Work?
  • The day after the passage of the November 8
    referendum, the following question was asked by
    two different individuals
  • Doesnt this prove that the state funding system
    works, the voters approved the referendum?

32
Does the Educational Funding System Work?
  • My response
  • No children in any other school district should
    have to experience the struggles that our
    children have had to endure for the last two
    years. Their intense worry over losing their
    much loved school district should never have
    occurred. It has taken its toll on their
    spirits. We, as adults, must work together to
    ensure that children in other school districts
    never, never have to bear such weight. But
    today, our students rejoice and we rejoice with
    them.

33
Courage of Conviction in Turbulent Waters
  • The Florence Board of Education members are to be
    commended for the courageous stand that they took
    on behalf of the children of our district. They
    drew a line in the sand when they said, No more
    cuts. I have been proud to stand with them
    during this difficult time.
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