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Ysleta ISD projects $27.3 million budget gap for 2025–26; district and unions spar over health-plan changes

5040138 · June 17, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Ysleta Independent School District trustees heard a budget presentation June 11 that showed continued enrollment declines, multi‑year staffing reductions and a proposed 2025–26 operating budget that would use $27.3 million of fund balance to close a deficit.

Ysleta Independent School District trustees heard a budget presentation June 11 that showed continued enrollment declines, multi‑year staffing reductions and a proposed 2025–26 operating budget that would use $27.3 million of fund balance to close a deficit.

The district’s budget presenter, Lindley Camburn, told trustees the district has budgeted for annual student losses of about 1,500 but saw fewer losses this year: “This year, we only lost 851 students,” Camburn said, noting long‑term trends that drove staffing reductions and lower revenue. Camburn said the recommended budget would still leave an estimated $27.3 million gap after the district’s expense reductions and that the district plans to bring a payroll loan for board approval on June 25 to ensure July and August payroll can be met.

Why it matters: trustees were presented with several interlocking pressures — falling enrollment that reduces state funding, carryover ESSER timing that previously masked general‑fund costs, and rising health‑plan claims — leaving the district to consider use of fund balance, targeted personnel reductions through attrition, and changes to employee benefits that could materially affect staff take‑home pay.

Key numbers and context

- The district reported multi‑year enrollment declines, with recent post‑pandemic average student loss of about 1,316 per year; the current year decline was 851 students. Camburn said district staffing reductions have averaged roughly 77 classroom FTEs per year since the pandemic and about 28 central‑office FTEs per year. - For fiscal years shown in the presentation, actual revenues and expenditures were listed as: FY22 revenues $405.3 million and expenditures $388.1 million (fund balance increase $17.2M); FY23 revenues $387.9M and expenditures $405.6M (loss $17.7M); FY24 revenues $387.3M and expenditures $416.9M (loss $29.6M). - Camburn said the district expects a cash shortfall in August and will present a payroll loan for…

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