Commissioner Howard Not Optimistic About
Funding Adopted Education Budget
The Board of Education will be asking the
county commissioners for a one percent funding increase over last year.
Patch.comBy Kym Byrnes
02/27/13
The Carroll County
Board of Education adopted the Superintendent's proposed budget
Wednesday, much to the chagrin of Commissioner Doug Howard, who said the county
just doesn't have the money to fund at the requested level.
The school board will be asking the county
commissioners to increase funding of Carroll County Public Schools (CCPS) by
$1.7 million, or one percent above last year's funding level. The board of
education will ask the commissioners for total funding of $166.6 million.
CCPS Superintendent Stephen Guthrie explained
that the the school system has made $20 million in reductions in the past five
years and cut 155 positions system-wide.
The FY14 budget again again includes
reductions--20 custodial staff positions and four central office staff
positions. Additionally, Guthrie explained that the school system has to absorb
$2,061,303 in inflationary increases that include employee benefits, bus
contractor costs and insurances.
CCPS Chief Financial Officer Chris Hartlove
said that there are still unknowns in the budget, including how much funding
will come from the state and county.
Commissioner Doug Howard said that he doesn't
foresee the county funding education above $164 million. Last year the
commissioners forecast funding education at $164 million in FY14.
"There has never been any serious
position that's been taken by any of us [commissioners] that there's more than
$164 million there," Howard said. "There is nothing to suggest that
things are fundamentally better than that."
"My concern obviously is that $164
million still seems to be the high number we're talking about; other numbers we
are discussing are $3 million below that," Howard said.
Board of Education member Gary Bauer said he
"doesn't buy it"—he believes the county does have money to spend on
education.
"You have more than $164 million,"
Bauer said in response to Howard. "Raise the taxes. This county is very
wealthy; it's time they pay for what they want," Bauer said.
"The state has just reduced [our
funding], saying we're wealthier than before," Bauer continued. "I'm
tired of hearing we don't have money. We have the money."
Board of Education member Virginia Harrison
agreed saying, "We're beginning to lose good teachers who are going to
other counties that pay more.
"That one percent [property] tax cut last
year ... it would be fine with me if [the county] kept it and gave it to the
school system," Harrison said.
The Board of Carroll County Commissioners
will host an education forum on Monday, March 4, at 7 p.m. at Carroll Community
College.
On March 5, the commissioners will hold an
evening open session meeting at 7 p.m. at the County Office Building to discuss
a tax rate reduction, education funding and employee salaries.
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