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Corvallis SD 509J budget committee receives orientation as district braces for enrollment decline and state revenue shifts

Corvallis School District budget committee · April 24, 2026

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Summary

At an April 23 orientation, staff told Corvallis SD 509J's budget committee that modest state funding increases will be offset by a projected 179‑student enrollment decline and rising pension costs; the committee will receive the superintendent's budget message on May 14.

Lauren Wolf, a district staff member leading the presentation, told the Corvallis School District (Corvallis SD 509J) budget committee on April 23 that the session was an orientation to the budget process and not a final review of line‑items. She said the budget document is nearly complete and that the formal budget hearing will be at the board's June 18 meeting.

Wolf summarized the March Oregon Economic and Revenue Forecast and explained how state revenue drivers affect K‑12 funding. She said corporate income tax projections were revised upward and the Student Success Act allocations remain healthy, but personal income tax revenue was trimmed, and marijuana tax estimates were reduced — all changes that complicate forecasting for the state school fund. "Those revenues have beat out projections," she said of corporate tax proceeds, and noted dedicated funds remain volatile.

Wolf also warned the committee to expect lower enrollment next year: "we're projecting a decrease of a 179 kiddos, next year," which reduces the district's total discretionary dollars even if some per‑student allocations rise. She explained the district uses weighted per‑student allocations that target funds to students navigating poverty, students with disabilities, emerging bilingual learners and those showing opportunity for growth.

The presentation outlined key budget assumptions: contract status (the certified contract ends June 30, so salary assumptions are preliminary), benefit contribution assumptions, transportation contract terms, and substitute staffing trends. Wolf asked members to focus questions on process and assumptions at the orientation and reserved detailed budget questions for the next meeting, when the full budget will be released to the committee and public.

The committee was told the current plan relies in part on fund balance to smooth programing changes in the short term; Wolf projected an ending general fund balance of roughly $15.2 million (about 15.4% of operating revenues) for 2025–26 while noting the district is operating with an operating deficit (expenditures exceeding revenues). The superintendent and staff stressed that preserving programs while planning for long‑term cost pressures will be a central theme of the public budget deliberations.

The committee will elect a chair and vice chair and receive the superintendent's budget message at its May 14 meeting, when public testimony will also be heard. The budget document will be posted on the district website and a printable copy will be available at the district office when released.