District warns of steep health-insurance and inflationary budget pressures

Watertown City School District Board of Education · February 5, 2026

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Summary

District finance staff reported cost pressures including a projected 20% increase in health-insurance premiums and other rising expenses; the FAF committee is convening additional budget meetings and the tax-cap calculation currently estimates about a 2.6% allowable increase.

Assistant superintendent for operations and finance briefed the board on near-term budget pressures and steps under way to refine the 2026–27 budget.

The presenter reported a new partnership with Educational Data Services had produced roughly $136,932 in savings compared with other cooperative options, and noted the district’s School Safety Excellence recognition. On the expenditure side, staff said health-insurance projections are the largest single pressure: a 20% rate increase was discussed at the FAF committee and district projections place the additional cost at roughly $1.9 million in the immediate calculation and up to about $6 million for next year if current estimates hold. Other budget pressures named included increases in liability insurance (the presenter cited a prior 40% increase), utilities and minimum-wage-driven cost growth.

The FAF committee reviewed capital-project forecasts including a larger capital planning effort and a $13 million project update; staff emphasized that some aid streams are rolling off and that net state-aid is not expected to materially increase despite higher foundation aid percentages. Board members and staff said they will hold further FAF committee and policy meetings to finalize tax-cap calculations and review options for balancing the budget in the coming weeks.