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District 428 looking to maximize dollars

Committee to report way District 428 can save money

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Bresiess Marquez (center) finds a bus after school Thursday at Founders Elementary. (Kyle Bursaw – kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

DeKALB – A school board committee in charge of finding ways for School District 428 to save money soon will make recommendations that affect how and where DeKalb-area students go to school.

For months, a group of 20 school administrators, teachers, community leaders and teachers’ union representatives have been researching how the district can maximize its dollars and facilities while maintaining the quality of education.

“Their job was to look at everything,” said Tracy Williams, the board’s vice president and a member of the finance and facilities advisory committee. Another board member, Michael Lord, also was on the committee.

Committee members will report some of their findings and recommendations at the school board’s Jan. 22 meeting.

Williams and other members of the committee declined to comment ahead of time on what will be featured in the report, as it still was being finalized.

Some of the committee's findings will center around grade configuration and school consolidation, said Andrea Gorla, the district's assistant superintendent of business and finance. For example, one school building might house kindergarten through third-grade students, while another would be geared to fourth- through sixth-grade students.

"The committee was there to research all viable options for utilization of facilities, possible configurations of school districting, consolidating," Williams said.

The school board tasked the committee with a number of objectives in March 2012, board president Tom Matya said. But that was before the school district entered the 2012-2013 school year with a $2.3 million deficit.

Matya and other school officials previously have spoken about the financial challenges awaiting the district in 2013. State payments to the district have been late and pro-rated, forcing the district to rely on local property taxes (69 percent for the 2012-2013 school year).

Matya said the board has tried to maintain a strong fund balance while looking to trim $7 million from the budget over the next three to four years.

The district has a $21 million construction grant that it received to help build DeKalb High School. The district received the grant after construction was completed, so the money has been sitting in the district's reserves. The board did not use the money to eliminate the $2.3 million deficit, as officials said at they wanted to use it for educational purposes.

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