San Francisco Chronicle

Cuts coming amid Oakland schools crisis

- By Jill Tucker

The budget crisis in the Oakland schools has reached a critical level, with the situation so desperate that top-level administra­tors are voluntaril­y giving back part of their paychecks, and layoffs as well as classroom cuts are imminent.

The district’s most pressing concern is a $15.1 million deficit in this year’s budget, which will require schools and the central office to slash expenditur­es even though the academic year is nearly half over.

Without immediate action, and with another $11 million in cuts needed to balance next year’s budget, the district is at risk of a state takeover — again.

“It is not imminent; however, it is serious,” said Alameda County Schools Superinten­dent

Karen Monroe. “Oakland has little margin for error at this point.”

The district is still reeling from a $100 million bailout and state takeover in 2003, with $40 million still owed to California from that crisis.

Yet those charged with preventing a similar fiasco — a state-appointed fiscal trustee, the county superinten­dent, the school board and district leadership — have failed to stave off crisis.

Despite its checkered economic past, the district has been spending beyond its means again, a multiyear pattern masked in part by accounting tricks and lax oversight, district officials acknowledg­ed. To cover the deficits, the district has dug into its reserve, pushing the rainy-day fund below staterequi­red levels.

“In fact, there have been internal warnings about fiscal issues for several years that were not fully addressed,” district Superinten­dent Kyla Johnson-Trammell said in an email. “As a result, we have spent beyond our means and depleted savings to the point where immediate action is necessary.”

Johnson-Trammell, appointed superinten­dent in May, inherited the problem from her predecesso­r, Antwan Wilson, who left in February to run the Washington, D.C., schools.

The overspendi­ng at times has been eye-popping. In 2014, for example, the district budgeted $7.1 million for consulting services, but ultimately spent $22.6 million that year.

Last year, the board budgeted $10.4 million for supervisor­s and administra­tors, but spent $22.3 million.

The exception to that trend was in the category of books and supplies. In 2016, the district planned to spend $20.1 million on such materials, but spent only $6.8 million.

District officials and county Superinten­dent Monroe said several additional factors have contribute­d to the overspendi­ng, including increases in special education costs, big spikes in pension payments and declining enrollment.

But through it all, the district has had lax internal controls, meaning those in charge of the budget failed to monitor spending or flag problems. Last year, for example, the district’s enrollment was 400 students lower than expected, yet Wilson failed to adjust staffing to reflect that — which cost the district more than $3 million in unexpected expenses.

In July, the state assigned a new trustee, Chris Learned, to oversee the Oakland schools. The previous trustee, Carlene Naylor, retired.

Learned, a veteran in school finance who came out of retirement to take the job, pored over the district’s books and came to a quick conclusion: “My thought was, boy, I sure liked retirement,” he said.

The district, he added, “hasn’t been managed well.”

Learned said he is playing an active role in ensuring that the district doesn’t keep making the same mistakes that occurred under Wilson’s tenure.

“I don’t agree with a lot of what I saw him do. I think he was very insistent on getting his way,” Learned said. “The role of the trustee is to be sure that the board and the superinten­dent are not making decisions that are putting the district in financial risk.”

On Wednesday night, the Oakland school board officially acknowledg­ed the need to balance the budget, approving a plan of action, including an expected vote on Nov. 27 to identify specific ways to slash $15.1 million from this year’s budget. The superinten­dent vowed to clean up the mess.

“As leader of Oakland Unified School District, I want us to be known as the district that can and does overcome fiscal adversity while meeting the diverse needs of students,” Johnson-Trammell said. “I am committed to putting us on the right path to fiscal stability.”

Yet the expected cuts required to do that prompted afternoon protests on several street corners Wednesday, with teachers and community members lambasting the district’s mismanagem­ent as well as the state’s underfundi­ng of schools.

“Nobody had the gumption to say no to Antwan Wilson,” said Trish Gorham, president of the Oakland Education Associatio­n, the local teachers union. “We know there have to be cuts.”

Gorham added, however, that she thought $15 million in cuts was too drastic, especially coming midyear.

Hoping to reduce the deficit, several members of the district’s top leadership last week decided to donate a part of their salaries back to the district, said district spokeswoma­n Valerie Goode, although specific numbers weren’t available.

At this point, principals and other unionized administra­tors are not part of that effort, and their participat­ion would have to be establishe­d through collective bargaining, Goode said.

But it will take a lot more than salary donations to balance the budget. Learned believes the superinten­dent and school board are on track to make the decisions necessary to get back into the black — but it will take time to stabilize.

“I think they are getting it, but it’s going to be painful,” he said. “I’m working with them and really believe that Kyla is listening, the board is listening, and there will be changes that will make this district much more efficient, much more transparen­t and it’s just going to take this fiscal year to get it back in shape.”

 ?? Leah Millis / The Chronicle ?? Teacher Roxana Miles grips a sign and a donation she got for supplies at a protest against budget cuts for Oakland schools.
Leah Millis / The Chronicle Teacher Roxana Miles grips a sign and a donation she got for supplies at a protest against budget cuts for Oakland schools.

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