Camas School District leaders are set to announce what Superintendent John Anzalone has called “another small set of reductions” this week as they grapple with a revenue shortfall that will likely result in budget cuts totaling 10% to 12% of the district’s budget ahead of the 2025-26 school year.
“We want to be transparent with the community,” Anzalone told Camas School Board members during their Nov. 25 board meeting. “We will be announcing some other reductions about one week after Thanksgiving
“We want to make sure, as we plan for stability, that we’re trying to avoid temporary fixes and have something that is more sustainable over time so that, hopefully, we won’t be having this conversation five, six, seven years down the road,” Anzalone added. “We’re hoping for future boards that we can set up a good pathway for success.”
The district had a $7.2 million revenue shortfall going into its current 2024-25 budget, with $134.2 million in expenditures and $127 million in revenues, but chose to reduce its general fund reserves from $11.8 million to $4.6 million to balance the budget without major cuts to services. A variety of factors during the current school year, including lower-than-expected enrollment rates, increasing operational costs and the end of COVID-relief money from the federal government, have led to a projected $7.9 million revenue shortfall ahead of the 2025-26 school year and a depleted general fund balance that would have fallen to what district leaders have called “critically low” levels by the end of the current school year without budget reductions.
In August, Anzalone sent a notice to staff announcing that some budget cuts would be needed during the 2024-25 school year.