Camas School District leaders sounded the alarm in 2022, and tried to warn the community that the district’s lower enrollment rates, combined with less money from the state, would force budget cuts in 2023-24, but the news still came as a shock for those most affected by the district’s $6 million cuts.
“I knew the budget situation was serious, but I was surprised by the impact on our campus,” Aaron Smith, the principal of Camas’ project-based learning campus, which includes Odyssey Middle School and Discovery High School, told The Post-Record this week. “I was not anticipating the impact on the principalship here.”
Smith is referring to the district’s decision to combine its newest school, the online K-12 Camas Connect Academy, with the 5-year-old Discovery High School and to give “reduction in force” notices to Smith as well as Dan Huld, the principal at CCA, before advertising for a new principal position that will oversee all three schools: Odyssey Middle, Discovery High and the mostly remote CCA school, which will utilize Discovery High space for its staff members and in-person meetings with students.
Camas School District Superintendent John Anzalone said this week that the district’s “unification” of the PBL campus and CCA made sense financially and physically.
“When we first started looking at the dollar amount we had to get to (for the $6 million worth of budget reductions), we knew there would have to be some sort of consolidation of our smaller schools,” Anzalone said.