{"id":28527,"date":"2017-02-28T19:30:00","date_gmt":"2017-03-01T03:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/school-board-details-unprecedented-challenges-financial-uncertainty\/"},"modified":"2017-02-28T19:30:00","modified_gmt":"2017-03-01T03:30:00","slug":"school-board-details-unprecedented-challenges-financial-uncertainty","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/school-board-details-unprecedented-challenges-financial-uncertainty\/","title":{"rendered":"School board details \u2018unprecedented\u2019 challenges, financial uncertainty"},"content":{"rendered":"
Monday night’s joint meeting with the Juneau School District Board of Education and the City and Borough of Juneau Assembly centered around “unprecedented” challenges facing local schools and financial uncertainty for both parties involved.<\/p>\n
In the past, the Assembly has wholeheartedly supported the Board of Education, routinely giving as much funding as possible, and board president Brian Holst said early on in the meeting that the board members “sincerely appreciate” the dedication to education funding.<\/p>\n
Board member Sean O’Brien, a lifelong resident and longtime board member, said the financial situation now is dire, and the challenges facing students are “unprecedented.” Those concerns include students not being prepared enough for kindergarten, a need for more counselors and a rise in drug use.<\/p>\n
“I feel like it’s close to a breaking point,” O’Brien said at the meeting. “It’s amazing, it’s phenomenal that we’re doing as well as we are. We are Band-Aiding a lot of things right now. We’re Band-Aiding facilities, we’re Band-Aiding roofs, we’re Band-Aiding all kinds of things that are just, a Band-Aid and a piece of gum holding it together, that’s where we’re at.”<\/p>\n
The state of Alaska sets a certain minimum and maximum amount a local government can give its schools. That funding cap varies based on a number of factors in a school district. The CBJ Assembly has long made it a priority to fund its schools all the way up to the cap.<\/p>\n
Multiple Assembly members expressed concerns Monday about that funding, including Debbie White.<\/p>\n
“This is a really hard time for us to answer the extra (financial) ask and we do have a level of uncertainty, because we’re in an age of uncertainty ourselves,” White said. “As much as any one of us would love to tell you that we could promise you something, right now is probably not a good time for that.”<\/p>\n
Assembly member Beth Weldon was also concerned, as the school board members painted a bleak picture of the state of the schools yet also wanted to make a major dedication to pre-kindergarten education.<\/p>\n