nothin Schools CFO: Guv’s Budget “Devastating” | New Haven Independent

Schools CFO: Guv’s Budget Devastating”

Christopher Peak Pre-Pandemic File Photo

CFO Phil Penn: Bad form to abandon plan so soon.

Help is not on the way from the state to close the gap between what New Haven schools need and what they’ll get, the system’s financial chief warned.

District Chief Financial Officer Phillip Penn offered the warning Monday evening in relaying the effects of Gov. Ned Lamont’s proposed new two-year state budget to the New Haven Board of Education.

New Haven Public Schools plans to ask the city for $8.8 million more than the district received this year, for a total of $198 million. But the city has a fiscal crisis of its own. Hope was in the air that new elected leaders at the state and federal level might mean more money for schools.

However, when Lamont announced his two-year budget, he decided to use one-time federal stimulus funds to keep pace with scheduled raises in education contributions. The Education Cost Sharing and Alliance grants that support New Haven schools would be frozen at current levels.

The ECS increases were part of a ten-year, bipartisan plan to better support schools in the state, particularly those in urban districts like New Haven.

It’s bad form that the state has proposed a freeze two years into a ten-year fix,” Penn said.

That freeze will have devastating effects, and I don’t usually use terms like that. We have no opportunity to do anything with the Alliance grant other than what we do now. If the Alliance grant pays for a staff member, we don’t have a way to pay for a salary increase,” Penn said.

With a tight city budget and no new help from the state, the news likely means another year of budget cuts.

Penn did not discuss any potential cuts on Monday with the Board of Education. He did say that some of the new items on the district’s wish list were looking less likely.

One item on the list is an initiative to even out funding differences between different New Haven schools and offer more support to schools with multilingual learners.

While the district is celebrating news of $38 million in Covid relief, Penn made it clear that the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSERF), round two, is not allowed to supplant local support. Initiatives to make up for learning loss — like tutoring, extended school days and summer programs — and a few other Covid-specific categories qualify. Rising salaries do not.

Board member Darnell Goldson noted that some of the district’s most involved and critical parents are not on the team planning how to spend the Covid relief. Those critical voices are key to making sure the district does not repeat mistakes from previous grants, he said.

Superintendent Iline Tracey responded that she is not looking for names for the 70-person ESSER II planning team. Parents not on that planning team can attend focus group sessions with those on the team and email other ideas to Assistant Superintendent Keisha Redd-Hannans. Redd-Hannans said that the district has already gathered input from around 500 administrators, teachers, support staff, paraprofessionals and student leaders through the focus group process.

Watch the meeting below.

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