Charlottesville council backs planning to recapture 50% of unexpected state school funds, asks staff to draft appropriation language
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Summary
Staff told the council the schools could receive $500,000–$900,000 in additional state funds; councilors supported planning a 50% gain-sharing approach this year and asked staff and legal to draft appropriation/contingency language for the upcoming readings.
City staff told councilors that pending state budget proposals could give the Charlottesville schools an extra $500,000 to $900,000 beyond what the city appropriated, and the council discussed ways to ensure the city could recapture some share of any unanticipated state awards.
"The answer is there's 500,000 to $900,000 that they could receive above the budget," a staff member said, prompting questions about whether the city should expect any of those funds to be returned. Staff and legal counsel explained options: place an amount into contingency rather than appropriating it in full; appropriate periodically (quarterly) rather than all at once; or add language to the appropriation ordinance that would permit the city to recapture a portion. Legal staff warned that once funds are fully appropriated the city has no clean way to claw them back without school-board consent.
After discussion several councilors expressed support for planning to recapture about 50% of any excess state money this year (a "50/50" expectation), while asking staff to craft language that would be workable and flexible in the face of potential unfunded mandates or school cost increases. Staff said they would prepare recommended language and calculations for Monday's first reading and the adoption vote later in the week.
Councilors emphasized that the mechanics matter: the gain-share would operate on net surplus after any new school expenditures, and staff would need to account for possible unfunded mandates that could reduce any recapturable amount.
Next steps: staff and counsel will draft appropriation/contingency language for Monday and be prepared to refine it before Thursday's adoption vote.

