Schools

Some Good News, Perhaps, for San Ramon Valley Schools in Revised State Budget

But district officials aren't celebrating yet.

Governor Jerry Brown released his revised state budget for 2011-12 Monday morning, and the numbers included more money for schools than the governor originally laid out in January.

But San Ramon Valley Unified School District officials aren’t celebrating yet. The revise is only a proposal.

Brown projected that the state will take in $6.6 billion more in tax revenue this year and next year than was originally expected, with $1.6 billion of that going to K-12 education and community colleges.

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But that money is cash already owed to the schools. The Sacramento Bee reports that the extra cash would go towards reducing short-term IOUs to schools, which the governor's previous budget proposal relied on, in part, as a form of "backdoor borrowing."

While the money may help some school districts that have had to borrow money against those IOUs, SRVUSD has tightened its belt rather than borrow money in recent years.

Find out what's happening in San Ramonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

District officials are waiting to find out exactly what the new budget proposal might mean for schools at a conference scheduled for next week by School Services of California, Inc., a school consulting and advocacy firm.

The budget battle in the state capitol is far from over.

Any budget the governor proposes must be approved by the legislature before it can be enacted.

Brown has been battling with Republican legislators over extending higher sales, vehicle and income taxes for five more years.

On Monday, he floated delaying the income tax proposal while continuing to push for the other two, which he said would net a total increase in education spending of about $3 billion over last year.

“This is a program of taxes with a vote of the people,” Brown said at a press conference, while also proposing to lay off 5,500 state workers and eliminate various boards and commissions.

However, without agreement in the legislature, it’s unclear if or when Brown will be able to put the tax extensions before voters.

Faced with that uncertainty, school districts have been contemplating two very different budget scenarios — one if the tax extensions pass, and another far more draconian option if they don’t. 

In San Ramon Valley Unified's proposed budget, based on a no-tax extension scenario, would mean furlough days, a shortened school year and bigger class sizes.

For more about the SRVUSD budget, click here.

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