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Special-education costs and default budget force proposed cuts including teacher and interventionist positions

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 leaders told the board that special-education costs (81 of 556 students identified) and a failed warrant have produced a roughly $400,000 shortfall under a default budget; the superintendent proposed delaying capital items and cutting staff including the shared MTSS interventionist, one RMMS classroom teacher and reducing an RMMS special-education case manager to half‑time.

At the March 25 meeting the superintendent presented a special‑education cost-driver overview and outlined the implications of operating under the district’s default budget after voters did not approve the requested operating budget. Administrators reported that, using the state’s October 1 count, 81 of the district’s 556 students (about 14.6%) were identified for special education this year (RMMS: 33 of 304; CSDA: 48 of 252). The district described in-district STEP and IMPACT programs serving roughly 18 students and said out‑of‑district placements can cost $100,000–$200,000 or more…

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