Lynn Public Schools outlines FY27 budget scenarios and rolls out Allaview student‑based budgeting tool
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Superintendent Cohen presented FY27 budget framing and three planning scenarios; business administrator Kevin McHugh explained Chapter 70 funding and the district introduced Allaview, a student‑based budgeting platform. Staff emphasized planning through January–April and protecting staff expenses, which make up ~82% of the budget.
Superintendent Cohen told the committee the district is approaching the FY27 budget as a deliberate, stakeholder‑driven process focused on equity and instructional priorities and that no final decisions were being made at the meeting. “The FY '27 budget is a blueprint for equity, innovation, and excellence,” she said, framing the coming budget meetings as opportunities for community input.
Kevin McHugh, the district business administrator, explained the mechanics of Chapter 70 funding and presented the district’s fiscal picture: he said the foundation or net school spending is $384,000,000, that the city contribution is $67,000,000, and that Chapter 70 aid fills the remainder (approximately $317,000,000). McHugh noted FY27 is the final year of Student Opportunity Act implementation, which raises questions about long‑term sustainability and the need to plan multiple scenarios rather than assume best‑case funding.
Superintendent Cohen outlined three planning scenarios staff are preparing: a level‑service budget (cover contractual increases only), a systems‑investment budget (targeted investments to stabilize instruction and retention), and a reduced Chapter 70 scenario (a worst‑case that would require difficult reductions). She emphasized that staffing accounts for roughly 82% of the district budget and that protecting personnel is a priority consistent across scenarios.
Jamie Colon, manager of financial operations, demonstrated Allaview, the district’s new student‑based budgeting platform. Colon said Allaview’s primary functions are allocate (generate base allocations per student and adjustments for higher‑need students), budget (allow principals and directors to enter and justify budgets), and manage (track transactions and view real‑time expenditures). The tool preloads mandatory baseline staffing (for example, one principal per school and a clerk per 400 students) and provides principals with flexibility to reallocate excess funds while requiring justification for overages.
Committee members asked procedural questions about grants and school accounts. Kevin McHugh explained that high schools use student‑activity accounts with city banking and checks; elementary school grants and donations are set up as grant or donation accounts at the city level and expenditures require Munis purchase‑order procedures (requisition → purchase order → vendor invoice → city payment). McHugh said Allaview will focus on base appropriation budgeting in its first year and will not track grants this year.
The superintendent asked for continued stakeholder input across January–April as principals, directors and central office staff develop budget proposals; she said final figures depend on the governor’s numbers (expected late January) and city inputs (expected in February).
