Schools could lose $6 million
Mary A. Castillo
Supt. Theresa Daem has seen a lot of state budget proposals come
and go, but the 2003-04 spending plan announced by Gov. Gray Davis
earlier this month shook her to the core.
“It would wipe out every supplemental program we have today,” she
said. “We would be a bare-bones organization.”
The governor’s program calls for the state to redirect $126.2
million of the estimated $160 million of excess property tax
collected by basic aid districts and eliminate the $120 state aid
add-on to the revenue limit.
These cuts would reduce the 2003-04 Laguna Beach Unified School
District from an estimated $23,732,200 to $17,696,744. Daem was
adamant that, although this proposal would cut 25% of the district’s
budget, the district would preserve teachers’ jobs, principals,
secretaries and the janitorial staff at each school. However, class
sizes could swell, and everything else, such as physical education,
music, computer labs, libraries, foreign language and after-school
programs, would be compromised or eliminated.
As soon as the proposed cuts were announced, Daem initiated a
letter-writing campaign with the Laguna Beach PTA Council, teachers,
principals, staff and the community.
“They’ve been wonderful,” she said. “As a community we have to be
relentless until [the governor and the legislature] understand.”
She felt that the state slashed funding to basic aid districts
because decision-makers were simply looking at dollars and cents.
What they failed to understand, in her estimation, is that when
revenue from property taxes are reduced, basic aid districts lose
their primary source of funding.
Basic aid districts receive $120 per student in revenue limit
funding from the state general funds, whereas the average California
school district receives about $2,500 per student in state general
fund tax.
“During the fire in 1993, as a basic aid district, we lost revenue
resulting from the destruction of homes in Laguna Beach,” local
parent Bill Steel said. “We didn’t get help from the state. We had to
absorb the loss.”
At the school board meeting Tuesday, Dawn Mirone asked on behalf
of the district’s teachers to participate in discussions in
generating greater efficiency and helping support the district.
The board members thanked her, but they still indicated that they
have an uphill battle ahead.
“Given the gravity of the state’s situation, there are no
guarantees how it will come out,” board member Robert Whalen said.
“We need to get something from the governor that says he’ll remove
the proposal from the table,” Daem said.
She sent out a community-wide e-mail Wednesday asking everyone
from real estate agents to parents to write state leaders.
The budget is due in to the governor on June 15. He must sign or
veto it before July 1.
* MARY A. CASTILLO covers education, public safety and City Hall.
She can be reached at [email protected].
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