Las Vegas Review-Journal

CCSD should be audited

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Why does the Clark County School District have a budget deficit? We need to consider the money that is budgeted and how that money is spent.

Nevada has had some of the lowest per-pupil funding in the United States for a long time, an indication that Nevada does not budget enough money for educating our children.

A forensic audit would help us all to understand how CCSD spends the money it does receive. How much is spent on programs and gadgets and gimmicks? How many administra­tive positions in district offices have a significan­t positive impact on our students? How much bargaining power does the fifth-largest school district in the nation have to negotiate prices? We need more informatio­n, and people need to be held accountabl­e.

The district reorganiza­tion was supposed to put more decision making and more of our resources closer to our children. A hiring freeze on teachers should be the absolute last resort. Studies at Stanford University showed that the most important factor a system can control in educating students was the quality of the teacher in the classroom.

Clark County has a diverse and transient student population and many other unique characteri­stics that make it challengin­g to educate children here. We owe it to our children to examine the facts on budgets and spending, instead of throwing around clichés and ideologica­l beliefs. What is a reasonable budget, and how should it be spent? Jeremy M Christense­n,

Las Vegas

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