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D-432 eyes deep cuts after failed referendum

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Schurman said the high school choir was eliminated when the district reduced that teacher’s position to part-time; only elementary school students have a music teacher now.

“That was heartbreaking for all of those students as well,” Schurman said. “They don’t have that anymore. They don’t have an outlet for music anymore.”

School board President Tom Nielsen said the board would have to prioritize budget cuts. For school programs, the board will consider student enrollment and costs to the district. And while the board has yet to meet since the referendum’s failure, Nielsen said he expects another referendum on the April ballot.

Both Green and Nielsen said the district has a revenue problem, not a spending problem. Like many communities, property values in the district have fallen.

The school district is seeing its fourth consecutive year of falling property values, a big problem considering that 75 percent of its revenue comes from local property taxes.

In conjunction with the district’s property value woes, there’s less money coming in from the state, which has announced it will pro-rate its payments at 89 percent.

Enrollment in the district has dropped as well. Green said a lower enrollment does not necessarily mean fewer teachers are needed, but it means a smaller share of state aid for the school district.

Nielsen agreed that further cuts in the district could have an adverse impact on the education D-432 students receive.

“We’ve had our staff take pay freezes for three out of four years,” Nielsen said. “We’ve reduced benefits. We’ve eliminated 27 positions. We decided that to keep cutting is really going to hurt kids and the community. ... That’s why we chose to go for the referendum.”

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