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Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficit

Laura Beaton
Staff Writer
7/3/29012

In a four-hour meeting June 28, Plumas Unified School District board of directors approved the proposed budget for 2012-13.

The budget uses projected declining enrollment and revenue figures and shows a deficit spending amount of $4,149,366.99, as of June 26.

Yvonne Bales, director of business services, said, “The problem is that our revenue is dropping faster than we can reduce our expenditures.”

There are so many unknown factors at the state and county levels that these figures are only approximate and could very likely change.

“The budget is a moving target,” Bales said. “The economy is a moving target.” Huge losses in revenue have resulted mainly from decreased property tax assessments. The 2011-12 fiscal year ended with a $4,043,315.58 deficit.

Greenville science teacher Travis Rubke spoke during the public comment period and implored the board to reconsider certificated teacher and principal allotments for Greenville schools.

Rubke, named Educator of the Year for Region 2 in 2010-11, stated that former superintendent of schools Glen Harris “choked us down to where we are now.”

The current budget calls for just 1.5 full-time teachers in very popular Career Technical Education (CTE) courses. Culinary arts teacher Judy Dolphin must now teach other classes as well, according to Rubke.

Rubke made an appeal to restore CTE classes to Indian Valley, or even half of them. “I’d like to see that legacy (Harris’) completely erased. We’re going to grow if we’re given a chance to grow.”

Rubke also made comments regarding the leadership for the combined Taylorsville and Greenville elementary schools, which were allocated just a half-time principal.

There are so many activities at the high school, Rubke noted: “all those activities suck up the principal’s time, leaving little for the elementary school.”

“There are too many issues,” Rubke said. “The elementary school will continue to play second fiddle to the high school.”

The board asked audience member Gary Stebbins, principal of the two Indian Valley elementary schools, to speak to this issue.

“I know a lot of progress has been made. Greenville Elementary is the lowest school in the district in terms of assessment.”

But Stebbins believes that the first priority is to get the proper school culture in place, and then focus on instruction. He believes that culture is now in place.

Because of the impending merger of the two schools, Stebbins has been paving the way for an easier transition these past several months.

He has worked with each school’s students, parents and faculty to come up with a new identity for the combined school.

Indian Valley Elementary is the name chosen for this new entity. The mascot chosen is the wandering wolf, making the students the wolf pack.

The board asked Stebbins to head up an advisory committee to finalize renaming the school. There will be a public hearing July 11 at 5 p.m. at the district office, 50 Church St. in Quincy, to discuss the proposed name change.

The board spent nearly an hour discussing the pros and cons of hiring a half-time principal serving Greenville Elementary the entire year, or a full-time principal for half the year, then having the high school principal take over.

Issues of continuity of leadership, merging of two schools, availability of qualified applicants mid-year for the principal’s position, budget restrictions and state retiree legislation were important factors.

The board approved a motion 3-1 to hire a full-time principal for the first semester. Chairman Chris Russell was absent and director Bob Tuerck voted against the motion.

The board members moved into closed session to discuss the superintendent vacancy. After close to 90 minutes, they emerged to report no action taken.

The board approved a motion to hold a special meeting for discussion and possible action to approve a contract for the superintendent position.

Other matters of note were the approval of a couple of deferred maintenance projects at district schools, including a window replacement project at Quincy High School and a concrete replacement project at Quincy Elementary School.

Also, a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between Central Plumas Recreation and Park District (CPRPD) and PUSD was reached.

Jim Boland, administrator of CPRPD, spoke briefly about the MOU, which formalizes a long-standing agreement between the two districts, authorizing joint use of facilities at no cost to either party. The board voted unanimously to approve the MOU.

 

PCOE meeting

There was no public input at the Plumas County Office of Education board meeting, held immediately after the PUSD meeting was adjourned.

The proposed 2012-13 budget was approved. Interfund transfers to cover Forest Reserve related expenditures were also approved, in addition to CTE construction project expenditures.

 

 

Comments  

 
+4#1RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-03 18:38
So...will PUSD recommend once again to close schools and fire 34 more teachers? I know that the Board takes very seriously their fiduciary responsibility...

So, pretty soon will have students and zero teachers. Wow, Americas sure knows how to run a country...
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0#2RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-03 18:41
Oh, and, somehow Congress passed the Secure Rural Schools... means more funds for education...

Or is that disgusting to fund education in America?

In Nov, will you all vote for the tax on the wealthy for education or will you say 'fer-get-that, we dont need no edumacation'...
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0#3Balance BooksOverspending Issue2012-07-05 04:55
They teach history in school - so indivudals will be exposed to past problems and avoid these in the future. The problem is the politicans spending more then collected. The other issue is the teachers union kicks out the youngest vs the entrenched - thereby cheating kids and thier future.
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+1#4RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-05 05:33
All our gov entities are facing deficits. So, are you saying that all the sudden we spend more than we collect? How about the fact that taxes are lowest since 1950, high unemployment=less tax revenue, and diminish property values=lower prop tax money.
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+1#5RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-05 05:39
And, so are you saying that we kick out the experienced (read older) teachers? What's old to you - 30? 40? 50? 60? How would you like to have someone say to *you* - you are to old - you are fired? Have you ever heard of the word 'discrimination'?
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+5#6Re: PUSD DeficitPortola Resident2012-07-05 06:38
Why are they placing all the blame on the past superintendent? Because it's easier than actually trying to fix the problem. Get rid of unions and tenure, fire the incompetent teachers (yes, even if they have been there 20 years), keep the good teachers, and get good education back!
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+2#7Union mandatedAge discrimination2012-07-05 11:25
Mark Mihevc comment above. The teachers should be hired/kept on ability and performance - like everyone else in life. The union discriminates against the younger teachers with less tenure - plus forces them to pay union fees. Why would we ever have good teachers if they know they are first fired?
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+3#8RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitRobert Smith2012-07-05 11:33
Experienced top tier teacher pay in Plumas is $73K, established when the district was flush. Choices are limited when most teachers are at or near top tier as in Plumas after layoffs of newer teachers. You can lower top pay. Or you can close schools and increase class size. The latter was chosen.
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+4#9See comment # 8 aboveSenior teachers selfish2012-07-05 12:53
Teachers vigoursly complain about class size - but ask the senior teachers to take a pay cut - no way. Keep our pay and throw out the young teachers. This is why people with intelligence are frustrated with most teachers & unions. These teachers help put the UIO in UnIOns
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+2#10RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitRobert Smith2012-07-05 16:06
Don't see why, e.g. a charter school can't open in the Taylorsville facility, recruit a few $36K a year top teachers from the huge pool of unemployed applicants statewide, and continue the great tradition of excellence while running in the black there on the ADA money available.
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-2#11RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-05 17:33
Unions don't teach children - teachers teach children. And I agree - any 'bad' employee should be let go - but it has to be 'for cause'. I understand *any* teacher can be let go for cause.

Some of you have no clue why you are 'against' unions other than 'that's what they told me to say'.
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-1#12RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-05 17:36
And, why do you all think teachers are 2nd class citizens and undeserving of compensation? Do you have a degree or are certified? Are you all really saying that teachers should be paid slum wages just because?

I know some law - you want me to represent you? Or do you want a professional?
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+1#13RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitRobert Smith2012-07-05 18:15
Mark, here is what I have against the CTA union. With all their power in the dem legislature, California is still 4th from bottom of all 50 states in per student funding. But they still use power to protect pervert teachers from firing. Republican Wyoming spends double per student what CA does.
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+2#14RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitRobert Smith2012-07-05 18:19
So I'm not saying that teachers shouldn't be paid well. I'm just saying that we can't pay them well with the present CTA/dem legislature funding of education and keep our school open and fully staffed. Advertise a $36K teaching job and 100 will apply in this economy.
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0#15RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-05 19:46
Robert, you say it all. CA is near bottom in education spending. This needs to be fixed. Tax the 1% and pay for schools.

Seems like a great way to educated our children... They are the future...

Has nothing to do with unions...
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+2#16Spoken like a true patriot MarkJames Huffmon2012-07-06 16:49
Tax the 1%! Why don't you say what you really want to say Mark....Your for any tax that doesn't involve you breaking out your wallet....and your "lowest taxes since the 1950".most of the taxes and "fees" we pay today didn't exist in 1950, but then adding all the taxes in wouldn't fit your arguement
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0#17Let's talk about prioritiesJames Huffmon2012-07-06 16:56
If unions focused on "merit" instead of "seniority" they might regain some respect. We pay some of the highest taxes in the nation and the State Govt is controlled by the Democrats who claim to be "pro-education" So we have the two things that you say are needed.Why aren't we the best?.. Priorities
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-1#18RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-06 17:12
Hi James, yes we need to tax the rich. What do you care if we tax the rich? Our country, our State and our country need money. I pay my fair share of taxes, like you do - they don't.

Government, our civilization costs money to run...
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-1#19RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-06 17:16
That's 'our county' needs money.

And why do you all hate unions? Do you have reasons or is that what you are told to say...
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0#20PUSD DeficitChester2012-07-06 20:39
Sounds like a repeat of last year, Bales in the driver's seat and no cuts from the top. Hope the school board shows more courage, takes action to change the course of spending. Showing the communities, they are focused on the student's interest, not the filling of the pocketbooks of the PUSD office.
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-1#21Real discussionJames Huffmon2012-07-06 23:40
Mark, we could tax the "1%" at a rate of 100% and it wouldn't solve the problem. if you want to have a real political discussion and stop throwing around sound bites come over to plumastownhall.ning.com/
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0#22RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitMark Mihevc2012-07-07 07:05
Strawman talking point Jim. You buy a house over 30yrs. You need income to pay the mortgage.

And what do you see as 'the problem'. PUSD supposedly has a $4m deficit. What is more real than needing funds to alleviate that deficit?
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0#23RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitRobert Smith2012-07-07 17:48
There is a huge problem in relying on the state level in "taxing the 1%" to solve school funoing. The 1% is very mobile and can move their official residences to a state with no income tax quicker than you can say "Nevada". Meanwhile maintaining a "second home" in California.
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-1#24RE: Plumas Unified School District faces $4 million deficitAlex2012-07-08 06:02
You can also move money to Switzerland or the Cayman Islands for that matter like pres. candidates do. Repealing Bush tax cuts would bring in a minimum of 50 billion a year. That is a solution to many problems, but not the only one. Having multiple residences or tax havens are tactics of the 1%.
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