Bill Holmgren, presenting the district budget update at the request of Superintendent Michael Baumann, told the board that lower‑than‑expected enrollment reduced state revenue and that the district is projecting to be "short about a half $1,000,000 overall" for the current fiscal year. Holmgren said local revenue gains and lower salary spend to date partially offset that shortfall, and the administration will bring a revised budget to the board in February.
Holmgren presented a five‑year projection built on planning assumptions the administration provided: conservative 2 percent inflation for most levy and spending variables, a 2.5 percent formula allowance in 2026 per recent legislation, projected incremental staffing tied to enrollment, and continued pressure from benefit and step increases. He said the district’s fund balance is forecast to increase to about $11.5 million (roughly 5.4 percent of expenditures) by next June under current assumptions, but cautioned that without levy renewals, program changes or cuts the district will face fiscal pressure further out in the five‑year window.
The presentation highlighted two operational risks: (1) special‑education staffing shortages that have driven up contracted purchase‑service costs, and (2) levy expirations that could materially change local revenue if not renewed. Board members asked for peer comparisons and for options to reach a higher reserve target; policy committee work had previously proposed an 8 percent target and an action trigger at 10 percent. Holmgren said staff will refine the long‑range look as the budget adjustments are prepared and return with specific scenarios for board consideration.