West York Area SD previews 2025-26 budget; board weighs 4% tax index and fund-balance risk
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Summary
District staff presented a first look at the West York Area School Districtproposed 2025-26 budget, showing a projected $966,178 deficit under a 4% tax index, renewed concern about cyber-charter and special-education costs, and plans for hiring classroom teachers and special-education aides as IU classes return in-district.
Sherry, a district staff member, presented a first look at the West York Area School District's proposed 2025-26 budget and told the school board the package assumes a 4% property-tax index and currently shows a $966,178 shortfall under that scenario.
The presentation laid out revenue and expense drivers the district will use to shape the final budget. Sherry said the district began the year with a $9.6 million fund balance and that recent state revenue and unfilled positions have recouped about $2.0 million of last years projected deficit. She told the board the proposed building-and-department expenditures total $27,597,236 and that salaries and benefits make up roughly 63.2% of the budget. Sherry also flagged that about 7% of the budget pays cyber-charter costs and that special education and pupil services account for about 10.8%.
Director Todd Geddes, who asked the board to consider the district's bond-rating needs, warned against letting reserves fall below a safe floor. "We do not want to let our fund balance go below the floor of 10% of our budget," Geddes said, urging the administration to model what another $1 million in cuts would look like so the board can weigh options now rather than later.
Nut graf: The session was a budget preview, not a final vote. The presentation identified the principal pressure pointscyber-charter costs, special-education enrollment shifts, debt service and health-care costsand established a timeline for further review: a revised presentation in March, a final presentation in April and a June adoption vote after required advertising and statutory notice.
Key details from the presentation and board discussion
- Fund balance and deficit: The district opened the current year with a $9.6 million fund balance. Sherry said the 2024-25 budget showed a large planned deficit (presented as about $4.33 million), of which roughly $2.0 million has been recouped through additional state revenue and unfilled positions. Under the budget assumptions shown, the 2025-26 package leaves a projected deficit of $966,178 when using the 4% index.
- Tax-index scenarios and homeowner impact: Sherry presented scenarios showing no tax increase would widen the gap; a 4% index would generate enough additional revenue to nearly close the gap and, at the full index, would produce a small surplus. Using the 4% example, the presentation estimated an average homeowner with a $162,000 market value would see a modest tax increase; in borough areas where average market value is about $85,000, the example showed roughly an $85 annual increase (figures presented as district estimates).
- Special education and cyber-charter costs: Administrators reported enrollment changes drove material cost shifts: the district recorded 56 additional special-education registrations between last Oct. 1 and this Oct. 1, including students already enrolled in cyber-charter programs. Sherry said those placements carry roughly $950,000 in annual costs for the district. Board members repeatedly flagged cyber-charter payments as a major outflow and a driver of budget pressure.
- Staffing and program changes: The presentation said two IU (intermediate unit) classes will be returned to West York buildings; to accommodate those classes the district expects to hire two classroom teachers and seven full-time special-education aides (two aides for two complex-needs classes and one aide for an additional complex-needs class). The administration described structuring some new hires through attrition rather than adding new contracted positions.
- Debt service and other line items: Debt service was presented at about 6.8% of the budget. The technology line carried an asterisk pending updated vendor pricing for laptops and interactive boards. Transportation costs were shown rising about 4% and health insurance negotiations with the district broker were ongoing.
Board requests, concerns and next steps
Directors asked for additional modeling and detail. Director Geddes asked the administration to prepare a clear plan showing what the next $1 million in reductions would look like so the board can assess the tradeoffs in advance. Other directors balanced that concern with warnings about cutting programs too rapidly; one director said the community and administration should be given time to reach a sustainable path rather than making deep cuts immediately.
Sherry and assistant staff said they will bring an updated budget to the board in March, then a formal presentation in April, with final adoption expected in May after required public notice periods; the administration noted the timeline requires a 10-day advertisement window and at least 21 days (statutory notice) before approval.
Votes and related actions at the meeting
The board approved a set of consent and action items (listed on the meeting agenda as E-1 through E-19) by voice vote after discussion and without any roll-call nays recorded on the transcript. Personnel actions on the agenda were also approved. Those personnel approvals included the appointment of a new certified school nurse, Lisa Daniels, at the middle school; a staff speaker introduced Daniels and said she "brings over 10 years of experience as a certified school nurse" and is expected to begin in the middle school role.
Why it matters: The budget preview identified several structural pressuresenrollment-driven special-education costs, cyber-charter outflows, debt service and rising benefit coststhat will shape West York Area School District's tax and spending decisions for 2025-26. Board members asked for additional scenarios to keep reserves within recommended levels for borrowing and fiscal flexibility.
Short local note: Earlier in the meeting West York High School Student Council Vice President Will Plaubert reported on school events and fundraising, including a donation from the Vikings Club and upcoming performances of The Addams Family musical in February.

