Board strives for no layoffs
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Mike Swanson
The school board approved an interim budget Tuesday that includes
more than $2 million of the district’s reserve fund and a $700,000
endowment, which members hope will be enough to rescind every layoff
notice issued last month.
The interim budget, which would take effect only in the worst-case
budget scenario, doesn’t include several economic factors, such as
changes in teachers’ salaries and benefits.
It was organized by the recently formed Downsize Risk Committee,
consisting of the district superintendent and assistant
superintendents, one board member and the presidents of five school
organizations: the PTA; the California Schools Employment Assn; the
Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Assn.; SchoolPower; and the Athletic
Boosters.
The Tuesday board meeting was the first since preliminary layoff
notices were issued in early March in response to Gov. Gray Davis’
budget proposal.
The district’s budget still doesn’t measure up to what everyone
wants -- the equitable-case scenario that treats basic-aid districts
like all the others.
Dawn Mirone, president of the Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Assn.,
said that she and other teachers are willing to help solve the
district’s budget trouble, but they have their own financial
situations to think about.
“I would love to say, ‘I’d like to donate my salary to be able to
keep everything running,’” she said. “However, I would be forgetting
my husband, my five children, my house, my car payment. ... I’m not
willing to go there.”
The focus, Supt. Theresa Daem and board clerk El Hathaway said, is
to keep the budget at the bare minimum while keeping every employee.
“This gives us a substantial boost for maximizing the number of
teachers and other staff that we can retain until we get notice from
the governor,” Daem said.
The total financial boost highlighted in the budget erases the
district’s deficit of more than $4.5 million by using $2,466,852 of
its $6-million reserve fund, $700,000 from the Laguna Beach Education
Endowment and Capital Fund, and $1.5 million from elsewhere,
including $500,000 of class-size reduction revenue.
Because of state and bond restrictions, the amount of reserves
approved by the board was the maximum Asst. Supt. Norma Shelton said
they could approve.
If the worst-case scenario from Sacramento is taken off the table
in favor of the district’s proposed equitable-case scenario, then the
money would return to the reserve fund, she added.
“This is the perfect example of why there is a reserve,” Shelton
said.
The money coming from the Laguna Beach Education Endowment and
Capital Fund will function under the same provision.
Bob Earl, president of the endowment, said they’re offering
$700,000 just in case the district “isn’t quite there” when the
deadline to issue final layoff notices arrives on May 15.
Mirone expressed concern with the economic effect of the plan,
especially how it will influence teachers’ salaries and benefits and
class sizes.
Each teacher in the interim budget is counted as a full-time,
six-period employee, rated from a business perspective as a 1.0.
Teachers at the 1.2 or 1.6 level, who teach seven periods, a zero
period, or overtime, are also entered as 1.0s, or regular, full-time
teachers in the budget. As a result, fewer classes would be offered
to students, thus expanding the size, Daem said.
Daem said that, although the budget proposal would create larger
class sizes, she and the board think rescinding layoff notices and
absorbing some of the possible effects is the best move.
“Instead of going from the top and cutting out things,” Daem said,
“we went from the bottom and built [the budget] from all employees.”
Mirone stressed that if the plan turns into a bargaining process
between teachers and the district, then they’ll need a lot more than
a week or two to reach a solution. She doesn’t want to rush through
the process and end up, as a faculty, taking more extreme cuts than
other constituents in the district, she said.
Her association has ideas for cost cuts that affect classrooms
less, but she doesn’t feel they’ve been adequately heard by the
board, she said.
“If we are going to much larger class sizes,” Mirone said,
“whatever those may be, it would then become an economic issue,
because the teacher is working a lot harder in less desirable
conditions for less compensation.”
A contract between the district and faculty must be reached by
June 30, when teachers’ contracts expire. Mirone is willing to start
negotiating now.
PTA President Kristin Thomas said she also felt a bit leery of the
plan in the beginning, but now believes moving forward and solving
the issue with haste is most important.
“Maybe [teachers would] rather have their benefits and lay off
some teachers,” Thomas said. “My assumption was that the teachers
would want, as a group, as many people as possible.”
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