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Geoff Johnson: School district budget report the gold standard

It is possible that the report of the independent review of the budget of School District No. 61 (Victoria) will become the gold standard for reviews of school district budget processes.
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Protesters on Douglas Street near Boleskine Road rally against proposed cuts to music programs in the Greater Victoria School District in May. Geoff Johnson writes that a report by an independent consultant 聯politely corrects聰 the tendency for people, absent any actual knowledge of the topic, to look for simple solutions. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

It is possible that the report of the independent review of the budget of School District No. 61 (Victoria) will become the gold standard for reviews of school district budget processes.

Written by retired secretary treasurer Joan Axford, 颅probably the most experienced and 颅knowledgeable person in the province when it comes to 颅understanding school district budgets, the report clarifies a number of issues.

First of all, it politely corrects the tendency for people, absent any actual knowledge of the topic, to look for simple solutions (senior administrators are 颅overpaid and there are too many of them anyway).

Secondly, the report explains in detail the implications for school districts in the fact that the operating budget 颅(approximately 92% of which goes to employee compensation) needs to be cast twice in the same calendar year.

In public education, there are two official budget plans.

The first, for the following school year, is approved by 颅trustees by June 30 of the school year just ending.

This plan is based on 颅enrolment projections for the following September 鈥 a kind of statistical educated guess about how many kids will show up in September, how many teachers and classrooms will be needed and what revenues will be approved by government to meet that need.

The second budget is not finally approved until Feb. 28 of the next school year, when actual enrolment is known from the September head count, and it is too late to modify decisions that have kept the system operating.

By then, school districts have some knowledge of other revenues above and beyond the grants generated by the previous September鈥檚 full-time-equivalent enrolment.

There鈥檚 a great deal more to it than that, including labour 颅settlements, 颅international 颅student tuition fees, 颅鈥渉oldback鈥 funds, special program 颅allowances and whatever 颅contingency and accumulated reserves look predictable.

According to the Axford report, the reason for some surplus in the 2019/20 Greater Victoria School District budget is attributable to reduced 颅staffing replacement due to the pandemic ($1,601,071), reduced utility costs due to school 颅closures ($492,610) and reduced supply costs due to school 颅closures ($3,127,653), all of which resulted in a 2019/20 surplus of $5,221,334.

All otherwise unpredictable budget influences.

An operating budget 颅surplus for a sa国际传媒 school district is a 颅double-edged sword, 颅inasmuch as a surplus of any more than $5 million against a $200-颅million-plus expenditure, while it provides some comfort against unexpected exigencies of the coming year, can quickly become politically unacceptable if it is felt the money 鈥渟hould have gone to classrooms.鈥

As I said, it鈥檚 an uninformed response to a very complicated fiscal situation but it makes for good media opinion pieces.

On the other hand, a 2015 report by Ernst and Young that examined school districts across sa国际传媒 and their operating surpluses advises that a 3% surplus is not only acceptable but wise.

There is more to the 27-page densely loaded report, much more, but it goes a long way toward explaining the 颅complexities of an 颅organization like the Greater Victoria School District trying to balance expected revenues of $204 million with anticipated expenditures of around $212 million.

That balancing act needs to be accomplished to the benefit of approximately 20,000 immediate clients (the kids) in 44 buildings staffed by about 1,100 teaching employees and another 1,000 or so non-teaching employees.

The full report is online at SD61 and bears reading more than once, especially for 颅anyone who wants to seriously 颅understand the district鈥檚 current fiscal challenges.

And, like any report of 颅genuine value, Joan Axford鈥檚 review includes some 颅useful颅聽颅recommendations.

The first two recommend that the district 鈥渃ontinue the work of building understanding and transparency around budgets鈥 and that 鈥渇or the program reduction options that the Board does not implement in this budget, immediately establish a working group to evaluate how these programs might be offered in a more cost-effective manner.鈥

The review also recommends that 鈥渢he Board should receive regular updates on the system impacts and adjustments resulting from budget decisions.鈥

Finally, the report suggests that 鈥渢he Board may want to consider options that span two school years to allow for further engagement on the difficult available options.鈥

As one who has always 颅advocated that school districts pay greater attention to communication with a broader public, the last sentence of the review caught my eye: 鈥淭he report also provides considerations for the Board and senior management on improving sharing and processes moving forward.鈥

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Geoff Johnson is a former superintendent of schools.