The Catoosa County News

Ga. schools budget adopted with $950M in cuts

- By Beau Evans

Georgia school officials adopted a budget for the upcoming school year Tuesday, June 30, that cuts roughly $950 million in funds for basic classroom education due to economic pains from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The 2021 fiscal year budget has also been trimmed to reduce funds for career training, grants for specialnee­ds students and state contributi­ons to the teachers’ pension fund.

Rusk Roam, the state Department of Education’s chief financial officer, noted the budget cuts were tough but not quite as dire as initially expected. He added the state will be able to fully fund $726 million for financiall­y struggling schools.

“To say the least, this has been a long, challengin­g road to get here,” Roam said during a state Board of Education meeting on Tuesday, June 30.

Local school districts will be left to determine how to swallow cuts for their schools in terms of whether to furlough teachers or reduce the number of classroom days for the 2020-21 school year.

Teacher salaries will not change despite the budget cuts, officials said Tuesday, June 30.

School funding has been propped up by roughly $457 million in funds from the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act.

Among a host of cuts, the $11.7 billion Georgia schools budget trims about $6.1 million in grant funding for students with autism and severe emotional behavioral challenges, $2 million in grants for career and agricultur­al education, and $700,000 earmarked for feminine hygiene products.

It also reduces the employer share of the Teachers Retirement System from about 21% to 19%.

Additional­ly, the state board moved Tuesday, June 30, to spend $4 million on purchasing electronic devices for online learning and to pump an additional $1.2 million into a staterun virtual school program to hire 100 teachers for online classes.

Georgia’s roughly 1.7 million students shifted to virtual learning as in-person classes closed across the state in late March due to the pandemic. Officials expect to see a mix of virtual and inperson classes for the upcoming year, depending on each district’s ability to resume relatively normal operations.

Up in the air is whether Georgia will be able to pocket roughly $7.5 million budgeted for preparing year-end tests. State officials have asked the federal government to waive administer­ing the Georgia Milestones assessment­s and other reporting requiremen­ts for the 2020-21 school year.

The state school budget poised to take effect Wednesday, July 1, was set last week by the General Assembly, which approved about $2.2 billion in cuts to state agencies. Gov. Brian Kemp signed the 2021 fiscal year budget Tuesday morning, June 30.

 ?? Ap-jeff Amy ?? Justin Johnson, a middle school teacher in Chamblee, and Triana Arnold James, a Democratic state Senate candidate from Villa Rica, protest proposed state education budget cuts outside the Georgia state Capitol in Atlanta. The handful of protesters appeared on the same day a Senate committee voted to cut more than $1 billion in K-12 funding after state revenue nosedived because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Ap-jeff Amy Justin Johnson, a middle school teacher in Chamblee, and Triana Arnold James, a Democratic state Senate candidate from Villa Rica, protest proposed state education budget cuts outside the Georgia state Capitol in Atlanta. The handful of protesters appeared on the same day a Senate committee voted to cut more than $1 billion in K-12 funding after state revenue nosedived because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Contribute­d CHI Memorial’s mobile lung CT coach

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