District closing in on budget numbers
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Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- Ring Mike Fine in his office at 1 in the morning,
and Newport Mesa’s assistant superintendent for business services likely
will answer the phone -- albeit with audible fatigue.
As the man in charge of the district’s money, Fine has been working
around the clock to finish the district’s final budget, which Fine said
will be about $120 million. This year, the budget is complicated by a
host of new state programs that come with intricate new bookkeeping
procedures.
Overall, said Fine, the district will receive more money that it did
last year, but local officials will have far less say in how to spend it.
Principals used to get lump sums to spend at their schools as they saw
fit, Fine said. Now they get money earmarked for specific purposes, which
have to be spent and accounted for in specific ways.
“Say schools used to get $40 in the form of two crisp twenties,” Fine
said. “Now, maybe they’re getting $45, but it’s coming down in ones,
fives, tens and twenties.”
This is not the only budget-related headache Fine and his
cheery-but-sleepy staff are facing.
Newport Mesa is also hovering right on the cusp between two radically
different ways of financing schools -- “revenue limit” vs. “basic aid.”
Which way the district eventually goes could have a huge impact on
programs such as Middle College High School and the school for homeless
children at Rea Elementary.
Right now, the district is “revenue limit,” which means it 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 switch
back to funding itself solely from local taxes, one of only 50 or so of
California’s 1,110 school districts that qualify as “basic aid.”
This means it wouldn’t matter how many students enroll in the
district’s programs -- the district would still get the same amount of
money.
This would make a number of programs designed to attract students from
outside the district financial liabilities instead of money makers.
That’s part of the reason the much-heralded Community Day School, a
school for troubled students that board members approved last April, has
been put on the back burner. The other reason is that school officials
say they can’t find the right building for the school.
Board members will vote on the final budget Tuesday evening.
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