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Norwalk school leaders warn cuts possible after BET approves smaller increase than board sought
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Summary
Norwalk's superintendent and finance staff told the school board that a BET decision to approve a 4% municipal increase, rather than the 4.9% the BOE and mayor sought, leaves a multi-million-dollar gap that could force reductions to non-school budgets and, if unresolved, further cuts to schools including meal program changes.
Norwalk's superintendent told the Board of Education on April 23 that a decision by the city's Board of Estimate and Taxation to endorse a 4% increase instead of the 4.9% the board had sought leaves the district facing a multi-million-dollar reconciliation gap.
Dr. Estrella, the superintendent, said the district treated this year's Panorama survey as a new baseline and then outlined mounting fiscal pressures. "If the funding that's coming into the schools does not equate to the rising cost ... we are inevitably placed in a predicament that we have to make reductions of essential services," she said, urging continued advocacy to restore the larger increase.
Finance staff presented the arithmetic behind the shortfall: an enrollment-driven rightsizing reduced roughly $1.1 million, updates to salaries and positions added about $1.1 million, and the drop from a previously discussed 4.9% recommendation to an approved 4% left several million still to reconcile. The presenters said they had prioritized keeping school budgets whole where possible and applied additional reductions to non-school budgets to protect in-class staffing.
As one scenario to reduce the general fund draw for food services, staff showed how returning to a pre-COVID billing model for families who do not qualify for free or reduced-price meals would lower the district's transfer to the food services fund by about $1.3 million while continuing to provide meals and not turning students away.
Dr. Estrella and board members repeatedly urged the public to press the mayor, council and BET to restore the larger increase. "We're hoping that the common council takes the 4.9% to reconsider," the superintendent said, and asked parents and staff "to write to the BET to express the importance of providing this additional .9%." Board members warned that, absent restored funding, further reductions could reach school programs and staff.
The board voted to table final approval of the BOE operating budget while advocacy continues with the mayor and common council.
What's next: district staff will present more detailed budget reconciliations and the Panorama results at upcoming meetings; the common council is scheduled to take up related budget discussion on April 28, and BET may reconsider before its May meetings.

