The North Kingstown School Committee reviewed a preliminary FY27 budget presentation and discussed enrollment projections and cost pressures that could push spending above an initial 2% baseline.
Superintendent (referred to in the transcript as Dr. Duva/Dever/Duval) presented a high-level preview of the budget before a joint meeting with the town council and invited questions from committee members. Committee members questioned enrollment projections cited from a Nov. 25 report (rendered in the presentation as NESDEC/NASDEC), which showed an overall decline of 58 students for 2026–27 (elementary +38, high school −92). The superintendent said the projection methodology does not account for students who leave charter or private schools at grade 8 and then join the high school, and historical actuals indicated that the real enrollment is likely to be close to current-year levels.
Committee members raised concerns that the 2% preliminary increase shown on the slides may understate likely costs if the district must absorb positions previously paid through federal grants (for example, Title I and McKinney-Vento supports). Administration said the 2% figure was a conservative baseline based on known contractual obligations (salaries and health benefits) and FY25 actuals; it did not include potential new staffing requests, which will be considered in upcoming budget meetings with principals and directors.
Lehi Ampella, identified in the transcript as Director of Finance, explained that the 2% estimate stems from FY25 actuals plus known increases (healthcare, existing salaries) and that budget figures could change substantially as budget review and bargaining proceed. Ampella said budget meetings were starting the following day and that the administration aimed to avoid speculative assumptions until requests were vetted.
The committee accepted the presentation without a formal vote and prepared to discuss the full budget with the town council at the scheduled joint meeting.