Schools

Budget Cuts Coming for Schools As State Deals With Revenue Crisis

Districts discuss what the state's $8 million budget hole will mean for them.

For now, school district officials can only guess what kind of hit their budgets will take as the state attempts to fill an eye-opening $8 billion budget hole.

But it's safe to assume it's going to be bad.

Experts on state budget and school funding, who spoke to school district leaders from across the area during a forum Thursday in North Olmsted, delivered somber news. They said everyone, educators included, is waiting to see what Gov. John Kasich delivers in his proposed two-year budget, expected before March 15.

Find out what's happening in Westlakewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Tim Pickana, the treasurer for Solon City Schools and a member of Thursday's expert panel, said school districts are experiencing an "unprecedented time" right now in terms of funding.

"Everything is on the table and anything and everything can be discussed" for cuts, including education funding, Pickana said.

Find out what's happening in Westlakewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

"We are going to be in a reaction mode so it's sort of a wait and see and holding our breath until we know more," he added.

Michelle Francis, a lobbyist for the Ohio School Board Association, said one thing school districts need to pay attention to is the possibility of legislators deciding to begin the tangible personal property phase-out this summer instead of 2013. 

Francis said that move is budgetary "low-hanging fruit" and would save the state hundreds of millions of dollars – but be a catastrophic blow to Solon and other school districts.

'Overwhelming challenges'

The reason everything is on the table is that Ohio is dealing with an $8 billion budget gap, not to mention an extra $2 billion plus interest to pay for a decision to extend unemployment benefits last year, said State Rep. Nan Baker, a second-term Republican who represents District 16.

"We have overwhelming challenges," she said.

Baker said legislators do not want to raise taxes in this economic climate and that the focus is on creating new jobs and boosting state revenue.

Zach Schiller, research director for Policy Matters Ohio, said the economic crisis plays a part, but he drops the blame on policy decisions made in Columbus.

He said Ohio is experiencing a "revenue crisis" – the state is bringing in $6 billion less in revenue than it did in 2006-07. The 2005 tax changes – reductions in personal income taxes and tangible personal property taxes included – have cut into state revenue but not done their intended job of increasing business activity

"Ohio has continued to lose ground to the rest of the country," Schiller said.

Want to fix the budget crisis yourself? Check out this deficit simulator at the Columbus Dispatch.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Westlake