School board approves balanced budget
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- Less than 48 hours before classes begin, school board
members Tuesday night unanimously approved a $120-million balanced budget
for the 1999-2000 school year.
Though the district only is expected to bring in $118.6 million next
year while spending $120 million, Mike Fine, assistant superintendent for
business services, assured board members that the budget contains no
deficit.
“You are absolutely in the black,” he said. Last spring, after
revealing that the district faced a $4.8-million deficit for the 1998-99
school year, Supt. Robert Barbot promised that Newport-Mesa would never
again engage in deficit-spending.
Highlights of the budget include $1.2 million in the district’s share
of the statewide class-size reduction program, as well as nearly $1
million to refinance the district’s long-term debt, eventually leading to
savings of up to $200,000 per year.
As part of the class-size reduction program, the district hired 32 new
teachers to make kindergarten classes and ninth-grade English and math
classes smaller.
The apparent deficit next year occurs because of a “timing issue,”
Fine said. The district received money at the very end of the last fiscal
year in June that will be spent this fiscal year, making it appear the
district is in the red.
But though the district is no longer facing a deficit, its general
fund reserve is only 1.36% -- significantly below the state-recommended
3%. Fine was quick to point out, however, that the district also has a
special reserve fund of money from the Irvine Co., which, when added to
the general fund reserve, gives the district about 6.2% for economic
uncertainties.
Board members said they were delighted with the budget but quibbled
about everything from the number of secretaries at Newport Harbor High
School to the way schools apportion money to teachers for classroom
supplies.
“It’s a beautiful document,” said board member Martha Fluor. “But we
need to be very cautious and bring the reserve back up.”
Earlier this summer, the Orange County office of Education also urged
the district to increase its reserve.
Fine also noted the district is on the cusp of two radically different
school-financing methods. As of now, the district relies on the state to
give it money based on the number of students who come to school each
day.
But if local property taxes go up enough, the district could become
one of only about 50 of California’s 1,110 school districts that qualify
as “Basic Aid,” financing itself solely from local property taxes.
Last year, district officials predicted that taxes would not be high
enough to qualify it as Basic Aid for the 1998-99 school year, but in
August they learned the contrary. But the difference was so little --
only $9,000 -- that the district was not able to hire extra teachers, pay
for extra programs or experience any of the other luxuries that educators
usually associate with Basic Aid.
If property taxes climb high enough this year, Fine said, the district
could wind up with a windfall next spring. But he cautioned that,
although the county assessor has predicted an increase in property tax
revenue, there is no telling now if it will happen.
So he assumed in the budget that it wouldn’t.
“We are being conservative,” he told board members.
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