Shenendehowa board reviews budget framework and midyear financial picture ahead of 2026–27 planning

Shenendehowa Central School District Board of Education · February 11, 2026

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Summary

School leaders presented a long-range budgeting framework and midyear projections showing an operational surplus and health-insurance savings, and outlined how a planned new kindergarten school (TRIA) will affect staffing and resource decisions.

The Shenendehowa Central School District board on Monday heard a detailed "Budget 101" framing and midyear financial projections intended to shape the 2026–27 budget. Administration emphasized long-range (3–5 year) planning and program preservation while presenting midyear numbers and assumptions that will guide decisions in March and April.

The superintendent framed the district's funds — general, school lunch, debt service, capital reserve and special aid — and said the budget is the district’s chief signal of priorities. The district is in the middle of an $85,000,000 capital project, the superintendent said, and that long-term staffing and program choices for a new kindergarten school (TRIA) are a major planning driver.

Cathy Wetmore Chase, presenting midyear projections, said salaries and benefits remain the largest budget drivers and reported roughly $2,200,000 in health-insurance savings compared with earlier actuarial estimates. She said those savings stem in part from a decision to self-fund health insurance premiums and from improved prescription rebate negotiations. The district shows an operational surplus on the current-year snapshot of about $8,200,000 and anticipates about $1,900,000 in excess aid from BOCES and building aid.

Wetmore Chase explained the district rolls midyear results into a 3–5 year forecast that uses enrollment projections from the Capital Region Planning Commission. She said the district applies a planning heuristic of adding one instructional employee for roughly every 25 student-change in enrollment. Administrators also warned that a larger-than-expected health-insurance increase would be among the biggest downside risks.

Board members asked about how assessed-value growth affects the levy; administration responded that the tax levy is the balancing line item and that assessed-value and equalization-rate changes are inputs to levy estimates rather than fixed assumptions.

The presentation closed with an outline of the budget calendar and next steps: more detailed slides and building-level disaggregation will be released in the coming weeks, and the board will refine projections before voter-facing budget decisions next spring.