The world as we know it changed early on in 2020 with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, just as we were finishing the development of the FY21 budget. As the virus developed and spread, all our lives grew more impacted with each day that passed. Schools across the state closed down on March 13, 2020 with the anticipation of reopening weeks later. However, that never happened, and the presumed brief hiatus of in-person learning ultimately morphed into a closure for the balance of the 2019/2020 school year.
With the pandemic continuing to wreak havoc locally and across our country, the reopening of schools for the 2020/2021 school year has been incredibly challenging for everyone. The process and learning model was expected to be required and consistent across the state, but that decision was shifted to a local control option over the summer. As a result, the burden of planning and provisioning for our reopening fell entirely on local resources. Countless hours of planning, meeting, adjusting, and fine-tuning was completed by district staff and School Committee members over the summer and early fall. However, as the uncertain nature of this virus lingers, we have experienced a continued shifting between fully remote learning and partial in-person learning as we attempt to balance safety with providing for the needs of all students.
It is in that context that we begin the development of the Fiscal Year 2022 budget, with the consistent level of uncertainty the only constant as we attempt to proactively plan and provision for the balance of the current year and ensure we account for the impacts that may linger into FY22. Overall we have seen a reduction in student enrollment as families have chosen to home school or transfer to a private school based on our model for this year during the pandemic. While student enrollment has dropped for this year, we have had a significant increase in the need for staffing of a fully “remote academy” option for families who do not feel comfortable and safe with in-person learning for their children. Some of those increased staffing needs were offset by enrollment decreases and allowed for reallocation of existing staff. However, there was far more need than available staff, and the remote academy and other supports needed for challenges brought about by the pandemic have largely been new spending. In addition to added staffing for the current year, there were also significant investments made to improve the safety of our facilities, particularly with regard to indoor air quality in all district buildings.
As we look to the development of next year’s budget, we continue to live with the challenge of planning with many unknowns. At this point in time we are assuming that September will bring a return to more full in-person learning, likely in a ‘new normal’ with protections like masks and other measures still in place. Based on conversations with those families that unenrolled their children this year, we anticipate the majority of those students will return in September. Further, based on that return to a ‘normal’ schedule for the fall, we anticipate that we will not have a need for fully remote classrooms as we currently have them setup.
To that end, we are calibrating our assumptions for enrollments and staffing in this budget to where they were prior to the adjustments made for the 2020/2021 school year, and we are proposing a level services budget in that regard. This budget is based on the assumption that our student enrollment returns to pre-COVID levels, that staffing returns to their more traditional roles, and our class sizes balance back to where they were assumed to be for the 2020/2021 year. However, we still need to remain agile and ready to react to the facts as they emerge with the trajectory of the pandemic this spring and summer, so we also need to plan for continued uncertainty as we finish this year and look to next. To that end, we will rely on Federal COVID relief funding to offset those unknowns in both the current year and into next.
We have received several new Federal COVID relief grants in the current year, but added costs for safety, mitigation, and staffing as noted above for the current school year have largely consumed those funds. The newest round of funding that was approved in December has not yet been confirmed in regards to exact district amounts, but it is anticipated to be roughly $800,000. The detail below outlines the expended or anticipated expenditures for each of the various Federal relief grants in both FY21 and FY22. For any funds not expended in FY21, the anticipated carry forward into FY22 is noted, whether as an assumed offset to specific costs, or to be used as a source to mitigate further unknowns both in this and in the coming year.