Las Vegas Review-Journal

CCSD must cut another $22M

Audit finds no signs of fraud

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

The Clark County School Board faces an additional $22.5 million in budget cuts, the district said in an announceme­nt Wednesday that blamed some of the remaining red ink on rising charter-school enrollment.

The district said it lost about $4 million in revenue this year because of Clark County students enrolling in charter schools. That loss occurred because the state reduces funding for the district by $1,023 for each pupil who attends a charter school, it said.

That reduction comes on top of roughly $8 million in funding the district will lose this year because it enrolled 1,400 fewer students than projected. It also lost $1.5 million when per-pupil funding for special education students came in lower than expected.

AUDIT

The School Board has already authorized three rounds of cuts that have amounted to about $40 million in savings to cover a projected deficit of $50 million to $60 million. It will face the remaining cuts at a meeting later this month.

The deficit was reduced by an unexpected state reimbursem­ent of $11 million in funding for full-day kindergart­en in October. The state Education Department requested authorizat­ion to use that funding from the Interim Finance Committee, a district representa­tive said.

Wednesday’s announceme­nt adds $13.5 million to the shortfall, leaving the board to find another estimated $22.5 million in cuts.

The estimates of the deficit have been fluid since the deficit was first revealed in July. Though the board has made more than $40 million in cuts, the district has not realized that amount in savings because it already spent some of that money in the first quarter of its fiscal year.

The district’s announceme­nt seems certain to heighten tensions between charter school advocates and traditiona­l public school backers who claim the charters siphon off funding. The school district also sponsors a number of charter schools in Clark County.

Asked to respond to the district’s salvo, Patrick Gavin, executive director of the State Public Charter School Authority, said only that the authority is committed to providing

Independen­t audit finds no fraud

The announceme­nt of the impending budget cuts came after independen­t auditors completed an annual financial review of the CCSD and found no material instances of fraud.

But the Eide Bailly accounting firm raised several issues with the way money was handled as the district plummeted toward its deficit.

Despite the findings, two trustees and other community members continue to call for another audit to delve deeper into the district’s financial woes.

The annual audit by Eide Bailly reviewed a sampling of the district’s financial statements from last fiscal year and examined how it spent money from four federal programs — including the federal Preschool Developmen­t Grant, which provides preschool programs for low-income families.

Auditors found that less than 4 percent of the children enrolled in the program had a disability, less than half the required level of

8.7 percent. The program also had at least one student who did not meet the low-income requiremen­ts, along with three for which the district did not have informatio­n to determine whether they were eligible.

Transfers violated state law

The report also found noncomplia­nce with state laws in two transfers of money between district accounts.

The School Board did not authorize a $29.3 million transfer from the general fund into the State Grants Fund — more than initially approved. That move came as the district realized it would not receive the amount of funding it was anticipati­ng for full-day kindergart­en from the state. State law requires School Board approval of such transfers.

The district’s general fund also was overspent by roughly $17.3 million, partly because of the arbitratio­n award for the district’s administra­tors, school district Chief Financial Officer Jason Goudie said. State law forbids governing bodies from spending more than the appropriat­ed amount of money for a specific function.

These and other financial issues ultimately led to the district’s deficit.

 ??  ?? Jason Goudie
Jason Goudie

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