Larger class sizes and a potential squeeze on quality extras await many Minnesota students this fall following the latest wave of annual school district budget cuts.
Federal COVID aid expires in September and the impact will be especially harsh in Minneapolis and St. Paul under 2024-25 budgets approved this month.
But few school systems have gone unscathed from the effects of inflation, higher-than-usual salary increases and lagging state aid — not even wealthy Edina, Wayzata and Minnetonka — the latter of which is enacting budget cuts for the first time in nearly 20 years. There, 15 full-time teaching positions are being eliminated, district spokeswoman JacQueline Getty said.
Many districts that aim to maintain some stability are doing so by drawing down on reserves — a year after a historic $2.2 billion state investment in schools.
“What is happening on the ground at the school district level doesn’t seem to be understood,” said Kirk Schneidawind, executive director of the Minnesota School Boards Association. “The budget issue is real and it’s not just because of declining enrollment and COVID money going away.”
Districts that successfully asked voters for additional funding last fall are faring better. But those whose proposals failed — Thief River Falls and Crosby-Ironton among them — are having to act now on both extras and essentials they warned earlier they may no longer afford.
There’ll be no pep band, after-school concerts or library book purchases in Crosby-Ironton, which also is eliminating a section each of kindergarten and second grade, Superintendent Jamie Skjeveland said Wednesday. The district, which received $2.6 million in the final round of COVID aid, is using $500,000 in rainy-day funds to help fill its $1 million budget gap.
Thief River Falls students will see their class sizes grow by four to six students, and those who live less than 2 miles from school will have to find their own way there. The district also plans to trim three to five games from all of its varsity and junior-varsity schedules, except for football, Superintendent Chris Mills said.