CHARLESTON COUNTY, S.C. – The first reading of the 2024 to 2025 Charleston County School District’s budget is just over a month out, and the board still must make important decisions on a number of topics included in the budget. Three meetings were held Monday evening including a budget workshop with the Board of Trustees, a Committee of Whole meeting, and a special called meeting. Although no major decisions were made at Monday’s meetings, each discussion is extremely important in helping the board make decisions in a budget year some have called the most difficult budget seen in years.
Cutting programs and positions is necessary for the 2024 to 2025 school district’s budget with federal pandemic money drying up. In a closed-door executive session meeting on Monday, the board voted to approve employment contracts for next year based on the contractual obligations and/or budgeted allocations for all certified staff. It is unknown at the moment who is and who is not still hired by the district following the decision made in the executive session.
More information on a proposed funding option was presented by Superintendent Anita Huggins, which would allow resources to be allocated to help schools in the district with students in poverty, special education, or multilingual. “You can rest assured though that our success will be measured against student outcomes,” Huggins said. The Weighted Funding Model comes with a $30 million price tag but would allocate funding from the district to individual student needs at each school if passed by the board.
The topic of teacher and non-teacher pay raises has been a major discussion among the board and its budget with a variety of different options available. The Charleston County Teacher Compensation Task Force is asking to incorporate the $5,000 bonus teachers received last year into their salary which would cost around $24 million to the district. Other possible pay scenarios were presented with each requiring a millage increase which would increase property taxes in Charleston County.
For a balanced budget this year, we would need the 3.8. millage increase, but we would not need a millage increase in the next two years for sustainability,” Board of Trustees Member Pam McKinney asked the Chief Financial Officer.
A few topics discussed at Monday’s meeting will be voted on at the Board of Trustees meeting on April 29, while the first budget will be presented to the Audit and Finance Committee on May 7.
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