Moore County Schools will seek a $2.3 million increase in County funding for the coming fiscal year, if the Board of Education approves the budget proposed by Superintendent Aaron Spence. The Board will hold a public hearing on the proposed budget on Monday, March 24, at 6:00 pm.
"I have heard it said too often that more money can't solve your problems," Spence told the Board during its regular Monday, March 10 meeting. "We cannot move the needle without continued support. We have to have a commitment from our community if we are going to transform our schools."
The County is providing the schools with $26.6 million this year; that number includes $24.5 million in funding for operations, as well as $712,000 in capital expenses and $750,000 for the district's digital learning initiative. Also included is $680,000 that is passed through to the County's charter schools.
Not included in that total is debt service — the payments the County makes on borrowing to finance school construction. Those payments are made directly by the County, not funneled through the MCS budget and will amount to $5.6 million this year.
The amount of money the County provides to MCS has been relatively flat, at $26.3 million, since 2011. This year, the Commissioners provided an additional $375,000 to help fund the drive to put laptops or tablet computers in the hands of every student.
MCS leaders and the County's finance team have held a series of meetings in recent weeks, working toward a more coordinated approach to budgeting for the schools.
MCS Chief Finance Office Mike Griffin praised that process during the budget presentation.
"The County has shown a tremendous interest in understanding our problems," Griffin said. "We want to work with them to address a funding formula that would address a variety of issues." That includes creating a dependable formula for county operational and capital funding.
Griffin said he hoped the negotiations would bear fruit in time for the Fiscal Year 2014-2015 budget cycle but, if not, was confident they would by the following year.
Lot combinations will be a thing of the past in Seven Lakes North and South if the Seven Lakes Landowners Association [SLLA] Board approves a policy change proposed during their Monday, March 10 Work Session.
The Westside Board is recycling talent.