Chicago Sun-Times

‘Now is the time’ for new mayor, General Assembly to avoid $600M CPS deficit, Board of Ed says

- BY NADER ISSA AND SARAH KARP Nader Issa is Sun-Times Education reporter. Sarah Karp is a reporter for WBEZ

In an urgent plea in their last public meeting before the April 4 mayoral runoff, Chicago Public Schools officials and Board of Education members on Wednesday called on the next mayor to secure more state funding for the city’s schools and fix structural funding problems as an impending deficit of more than halfbillio­n-dollars looms over the shrinking district.

Officials laid bare the dire circumstan­ces facing CPS in the near future, starting with a $628 million deficit in the 2025-26 school year that’ll grow to three-quarters of a billion dollars soon after. Federal pandemic relief funding has papered over long-standing issues, but that money is set to run out in two years.

“I’m not gonna be here much longer,” said Board of Education President Miguel del Valle, whose term ends this spring. “But we are going to make sure that whoever is the mayor of the city of Chicago … is fully briefed. Because this is as transparen­t as we have ever been as far as I’m concerned.”

The largest structural funding problem set to cause the deficit is a shortage of state education funding. Illinois officials admit they are only providing CPS with about 75% of the money it needs to adequately serve its students’ needs, which adds up to $1.4 billion in missing money. As the state’s largest district and the one with most high-need students, “we suffer the most,” said CPS CEO Pedro Martinez.

Another is teacher pensions — which the state pays for in all other Illinois school districts except Chicago. That’s another $552 million that comes out of the CPS budget as obligation­s ramp up to make up for years of underfundi­ng. CPS expects those costs to grow more than any other next year.

There’s also the reality that suburban school districts can ask taxpayers to foot the cost for new buildings and repairs through referendum­s, while CPS cannot. For more than 20 years, the school district has taken out bonds for capital improvemen­ts. This year, it’s paying $762 million toward debt.

“We have so much need in our buildings,” CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said. “It’s real. There is no exaggerati­on of the need.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot has also shifted other expenses from the city budget to CPS. Those include nonteacher pensions — a cost that has grown every year and which CPS officials project to reach $315 million by 2026 — and crossing guards and school police officers, worth $30 million combined. The mayor gave CPS more TIF dollars but not enough to cover the shifting costs.

“When you’re taking these dollars off the top, whether they were created by a pension holiday 30 years ago, or [non-teacher pensions], which has happened in my time here … you can’t pass us a cost without also allowing us the ability to raise those revenues as necessary,” said board member Elizabeth Todd-Breland, referencin­g Lightfoot’s moves and a maneuver by mayoral candidate and former CPS CEO Paul Vallas to fund operations using money meant for pensions.

Only an influx of federal pandemic relief funding saved CPS from earlier deficits and “papered over” existing funding problems, Martinez said. He said he’s ready for a fight for state funding but wouldn’t say what the district’s alternativ­es are if the state doesn’t help. It would appear budget cuts are the next likely answer.

In its $9.4 billion budget this year, $6.5 billion directly went to schools while $1 billion paid for pensions, $762 million paid off debt, $645 million funded capital projects and $400 million paid for central and regional office staff and expenses.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? CPS CEO Pedro Martinez says the Illinois General Assembly must help the district avoid a nearing financial cliff.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES CPS CEO Pedro Martinez says the Illinois General Assembly must help the district avoid a nearing financial cliff.

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