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Paul Wellman

At the Santa Barbara School Board meeting on Tuesday night, La Colina Junior High librarian Ramona Martin makes the case for keeping librarians rather than replacing them with “media technicians.”


School District Cuts $4 Million

Tough Decisions Precede Tougher Ones Next Year


Thursday, April 24, 2008
By Ethan Stewart (Contact)
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As reluctant as they were to make the trip, the rubber met the road this week for the members of the Santa Barbara School Board in their efforts to reconcile the district’s checkbook with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s historic statewide public education cuts. After nearly five hours of gut-wrenching decisions, public pleas for mercy, and confusing late-hour fiscal banter, the board approved more than $4 million in cuts. The blood of teachers, administrators, school psychologists, special education programs, and class-size reduction mandates dripped from the budgetary blade. “I know it doesn’t feel good, but we have to get there,” said boardmember Nancy Harter, speaking at the midway point of the April 22 deliberations and summing up the reality of the situation to her fellow boardmembers.

After deciding earlier this month to ensure that this year’s budget bloodletting would not come at the expense of the already hard-hit junior high electives, the district’s new second-in-command, Eric Smith, greeted the board with $4.7 million in possible cuts — a number that was made several thousand dollars more palatable thanks to 41 certificated district employees’ decision late last week to accept early retirement packages. A unanimous first round of money quibbles — which did things like increase school lunch prices, require students to make up every absence with Saturday school, and institute a Universal Breakfast program — got the board about halfway toward its mandated $4 million goal. However, after a subsequent and relatively uncontroversial vote imposed a 10 percent reduction in district discretionary budgets, reduced the total number of administrative positions at the district’s smaller elementary school, and saved the popular class-size reduction requirements for 9th-grade English, things took a turn toward the excruciatingly difficult. Boardmembers haggled over where the final million-plus in cuts would come from. Their choices included replacing retiring librarians with non-certificated “media technicians,” doing away with many of the elementary district’s health assistants, letting go five of the district’s 18 school psychologists, staffing all three district high schools at parity, and undoing the 9th-grade class-size reduction for math classes.

Despite trying to table some choices in the name of more research — a delay tactic that was quickly abandoned after Smith informed boardmembers that the county needed to see where the required cuts were coming from “tomorrow” — the board ultimately decided to stop the 9th-grade math class reductions. This move results in the elimination of roughly four teacher positions. The board also decided to reduce the number of school psychologists in the district from 18 to 16, to save the librarians, and to bring uniformity to the staffing levels of the district’s three high schools within the next two years. The latter, however, remained a potentially destructive wild card at the end of the hearing, as it is contingent upon ongoing contract negotiations between the district and the teachers of San Marcos High School, the only school in the district on block scheduling. That fact means San Marcos is staffed at a 31-students-to-one-teacher ratio, as opposed to the 35-to-one ratio at both Dos Pueblos and Santa Barbara High. Parity at San Marcos, though not necessarily opposed by its staff, would equal the potential loss of as many as nine full-time teachers.

Hoping to spread this blowout during two years, the district and San Marcos are looking at a new contract that would slowly increase the student/teacher ratios. However, at the advice of Superintendent Brian Sarvis, the board voted that should compromise with San Marcos not be reached in the coming weeks, then the salvation afforded the librarians and psychologists this week potentially could be withdrawn. Acknowledging that already $2 million in additional budget cuts are being forecasted for this time next year, boardmember Kate Parker made prophecy of warning well before the San Marcos tradeoff had been made: “We already know that next year is going to be another big budget-cutting year, so things we save today could very well be gone tomorrow.”

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Eliminate 4 math teachers and 2 psychologists? Would the elimination of 6 psychologists save the 4 math teachers? A policy of fading out the librarians (hiring no new librarians) and replacing them with “media technicians” would seem like an acceptable route. Odd that the city of Santa Barbara can lend money to purchase property (and remove it from the tax rolls) but can not assist the school district in the education of our children.

50yearshere (anonymous profile)
April 24, 2008 at 5:30 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Given the terrible budget situation, the board has done pretty well so far. The librarians are essential: they do a lot more teaching than the public and the superintendent seem to understand. Moreover, law requires that certificated personnel be present when students are in the library, and media technicians are not certificated. (If they were, the would command teacher salaries.) So without librarians, libraries would have to be closed whenever a teacher was not present. The reduction in class size for 9th-grade math is a significant loss, although the reduction did not apply to accelerated student in mixed 9th-10th grade classes anyway. On the other hand, anybody who thinks we can do without the little medical & psychiatric care we have now in our schools hasn't been reading the newspapers for the last decade. The parity idea seems only fair, but it's never a good idea to raise class size anywhere if it can possibly be avoided. There are no painless cuts to be made. The State needs to repeal the Governor's crazy DMV fee cut. That would balance the budget at a stroke.

il_miglione (anonymous profile)
April 24, 2008 at 7:17 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Again I ask, $4M out of what? Is this .1%, 1%, 10%???? How material is the amount to the total budget? How much greater than previous year was the proposed budget?

RCMeltzer (anonymous profile)
April 25, 2008 at 8:25 a.m. (Suggest removal)

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