On February 15, 2017

Windsor Central finance committee report FY18

Dear Editor,

My name is Jim Haff. Around four months ago I was appointed to be the chair of the finance committee. I’ve worked hard with both principals at the middle and high schools and Richard Seaman, director of finance and operations for the Windsor Central Supervisory Union. The total proposed budget for FY18, $11,698,853, which is an increase of 0.6 percent from FY17 budget.
The main drivers of our budget continue to be salaries and benefits. Our health insurance saw an increase of 3.7 percent, from $1,516,792 in FY17 budget to $1,572,839. Many employees switched to a Comp 1200 plan, which is fully paid by the district including all out of pocket expenses, but at the same time has saved the district on the total premium payments. The increase could have been a lot higher than the 3.7 percent.
We’ve increased the tuition for school choice students by 3 percent to $16,480 per student. We’ve added a curriculum director to the budget, which should help set a curriculum for 7-12. At the same time, we’ve increased our technology cost by $16,000 for bringing our Internet to today’s standards.
We’ve had a reduction in equalized pupils, which are in-district student count, by 10.53 students according to the state’s calculation. But at the same time, we have an additional 10 tuition students to make up this difference. At first glance, we were wondering why we were loosing equalized students and gaining tuition students, looking into the data what I see is that we had a few families move out of district to school choice towns and those children are tuitioning back in.  On Town Meeting Day in March we have Plymouth currently as a school choice town voting to join our district, which if passed I believe will reverse the above trend.
Just this week, we also discussed our new governor’s proposal for level-funding to FY17. We, as a board, feel that 0.6 percent increase, while adding a curriculum director and the technology, is much needed and a low cost to the budget. Please on Town Meeting Day, vote “yes” for the middle school/high school budget.

Thanks,
Jim Haff, Killington, WUHSMS chair of the finance committee

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

If Vt wants a future of abundance, we must choose to build

April 23, 2025
By Miro Weinberger Editor’s note: Weinberger is currently the executive chair of Let’s Build Homes. He was raised in Hartland and served as mayor of Burlington from 2012-2024. If you’ve turned on a podcast, watched a late-night show, or scrolled social media in the past month, you’ve probably heard something about “Abundance,” the new book…

Vermont School Board Asso. supports H.454 ed plan

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, VSBA supports the bill as a more thoughtful and phased approach than Governor Scott’s rushed, five district proposal. Grounded in a more realistic timeline: H.454 is the most grounded and actionable proposal developed during the 2025 session. It acknowledges the operational realities education leaders face every day. The implementation timeline is more manageable…

Vote Bill Vines for Killington Select Board

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, At the special election on May 28, I am running for the 2-year seat on the Killington Select Board. An incredibly diverse group of people call Killington home; my partner Mary Furlong and I included. After years of renting a ski house, we purchased our first Killington home in 1995. In 1997 we…

The real enemy isn’t fear, it’s how we let it divide us

April 23, 2025
By Stanley McChrystal Editor’s Note: Stanley McChrystal, who is retired from the Army, is the former commander of U.S. and International Security Assistance Forces in Afghanistan and the former commander of Joint Special Operations Command. He is the author of the forthcoming book “On Character: Choices That Define a Life.” This commentary was first published…