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Vashon Island educators say special-education funding gap forces levy reliance; safety-net reimbursements limited

Vashon Island School District · March 28, 2024
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 presenters showed a special-education shortfall (slide: roughly $400,000) and explained the state 'safety net' reimburses only when services exceed 35% above state funding; superintendents plan regional advocacy and may consider legal options if state funding does not change.

District presenters and Superintendent Fred McShi used a community forum to explain how special-education funding shortfalls are driving local levy dependence and shaping advocacy work.

A slide comparing 2022–23 and 2023–24 special-education figures shows a year-over-year shortfall the presenter described as "about $400,000." Staff explained the state's safety-net reimbursement can offset costs only when a student's services exceed a 35% threshold above what the state provides; the district reported receiving roughly $175,000 back in prior years and had applied for about $190,000 this year. The safety-net process requires an…

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