Friday, October 30, 2009

LAUSD considers reducing the school year, will VUSD also?

Los Angeles Unified School District like all other California school districts is facing huge cutback in funding for the 2010-2011 school year. In LAUSD case the cut backs will total 500 million dollars in VUSD the cuts will be 15 million which is in addition to the millions of dollars that were cut last year.

All the fat has been cut from our budget already, I can see no alternative for next year to make up the shortfall but cutting the school year, laying off staff including teachers, ending class size reduction or maybe all three.

Here is an article from the LATimes about possible LAUSD school year reduction to save money.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/10/la-schools-leader-considers-shortened-school-year-to-balance-budget.html


L.A. schools leader considers shortened school year to balance budget
October 29, 2009 11:39 am

Los Angeles schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines has asked his chief financial officer to study the possibility of shortening the school year to offset part of an expected shortfall of at least $500 million, The Times has learned.

The strategy, if adopted for the 2010-11 school year, would run counter both to the direction of national reform efforts and to the wishes of Cortines, who agrees with research touting the benefits of an extended academic calendar.

"You know I fought fiercely for a longer school year and a longer school day," Cortines said.


At this week's school board meeting, Cortines said he had no alternative but to consider all options. He added that some strategies had to remain off the table. He’s unwilling, for example, to make class sizes larger in middle and high schools. Classes are too large already, he said. Nor would employee furlough days be sufficient to make up the dollar shortfall. Cortines also stipulated that he would not shorten the school year for overcrowded, year-round schools, which operate on overlapping schedules that reduce each student's school year by 17 days.

Furlough days and shortening the school year would have to be negotiated with employee unions, said district spokeswoman Lydia Ramos. Cortines will review the internal analysis from Chief Financial Officer Megan Reilly when he returns from a weeklong trip to China, which began today, Ramos said.

-- Howard Blume

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