CSISD finance lead flags state revenue shortfall and budget pressures; fund balance remains three months

College Station Independent School District Board of Trustees · December 17, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
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

District finance staff told trustees the 2025–26 budget faces revenue pressures — including roughly $1 million in state revenue shortfall and declines in federal reimbursements and interest earnings — while reporting a total fund balance near $65 million (about three months' operating reserves).

Miss Wilson, district finance lead, briefed the board on current-year finances and budget planning for 2025–26, saying the fiscal year is roughly 40% complete and the district has collected about 35% of budgeted revenue to date.

Wilson explained a bookkeeping correction tied to the district's fiscal-year change and said that, after adjusting prior entries, the district was about $1,000,000 short in state revenue at the most recent reporting checkpoint. She added that recent drops in SHARS federal funding (previously nearly $3 million) and weaker than expected interest earnings — influenced by a change in the district's depository contract — are creating additional headwinds.

"We're 1000000 dollars short in state revenue," Wilson said when describing the current summary of finance; she also noted the district budgets conservatively because new PEIMS reporting will push state adjustments during the school year rather than waiting until summer. Wilson said the district is using a conservative attendance assumption (about 95%) for the 2025–26 budget and that payroll accounts for about 84% of expenditures.

Wilson reviewed enrollment and historical context: the district's snapshot shows about 14,016 students and staff are studying five‑year grade-to-grade trends and boundary adjustments before setting final enrollment projections for next year. She said the district uses campus allocations based on estimated enrollment, with fixed-cost allowances for items such as copiers. Staffing models aim for an elementary class-size target of 22:1 and average high-school class constants of about 25.

On budget management, Wilson described steps already taken: rotating central-office budgets back to campuses, requiring zero‑based departmental budgets, analyzing stipends and overtime, and creating a budget-advisory committee to dig into school finance details. She said the district will continue to seek additional revenue sources — including expanded out-of-district transfers — and expects to return in February with staffing allocations based on finalized enrollment numbers.

Trustees asked about projected shortfalls and fund balance. Wilson reported the district's total fund balance near $65,000,000, which she said equates to roughly three months of operating reserves; during Q&A trustees and staff discussed additional shortfalls that could increase the gap beyond the initial $1 million state shortfall depending on federal funding adjustments.