Posts Tagged ‘Cobb County School District’
Uncharted Territory for Cobb County School District – 2011 Budget
Your East Cobb Real Estate Agent would like to share this important information with YOU!
School Board Approves FY 2011 Budget
Reductions, Other Steps Taken To Address $126.7 Million Shortfall
The Cobb County Board of Education has approved a balanced budget for Fiscal Year 2011 that required numerous difficult steps to address a $126.7 million shortfall. The budget gap resulted from a significant drop in the school district’s two primary sources of revenue – state funding and local property tax collections. Since 2003, the state of Georgia has implemented austerity cuts that have reduced funding for Cobb County schools by more than $208 million. Additionally, local property tax collections in 2010 decreased by approximately 10 percent.
The spending cuts and other steps taken to address the $126.7 million shortfall follow a budget year in 2010 that itself required more than $97 million in cuts, including a 2-percent pay reduction for all employees. The balanced budget presented by Superintendent Fred Sanderson and approved by the Board of Education at its June 9, 2010 work session attempts to sustain the highest level of educational service possible under the challenging economic circumstances.
“This has been an extraordinarily difficult budget cycle, the worse I’ve seen in my 35 years as an educator,” said Superintendent Sanderson. “To face this kind of deficit one year after cutting almost $100 million is hard to imagine. Under the circumstances, I believe we’ve presented a budget that takes the most equitable approach to spending reductions. Education is very personnel-oriented, and that means about 90 percent of our budget is represented by salaries for teachers and other staff. To find savings that would help close a $126 million gap, we had no choice but to cut positions, but we did so as strategically and fairly as possible. Cutting jobs is the last thing I want to do, especially in this economy, but following a year where we had already lowered all employees’ salaries, we had no better options.”
In April, the school board conducted a community-wide survey to gauge public opinion on the budget crisis. One item asked respondents to rate various cost-cutting options. Of the more than 21,000 responses, the options that received the most favorable responses included reducing the school year by five days and increasing the millage rate. The option that received the highest percentage of “unacceptable” votes was reducing pay for employees.
The FY2011 General Fund budget anticipates $819,380,347 in revenue compared to $907,469,792 in budgeted revenue for FY2010. The FY2011 budget anticipates $819,376,569 in expenditures compared to $907,466,771 in budgeted expenditures in FY2010. The budget is based on a predicted enrollment of 105,205 students. Expenditures per student total $7,788, compared to $8,648 per student in FY2010. The approved budget results will not increase the school property tax rate.
Spending reductions and other steps taken to address the $126.7 million
budget shortfall include:
- Reducing 68 central office and support positions ($8.1 million)
- Increasing to maximum class sizes and reducing 636 teaching positions ($47.4 million)
- Avoiding millage rate increase by using SPLOST II excess funds ($23.6 million)
- Five furlough days for all school district staff ($15.9 million)
- Freezing school salary step for all eligible employees ($10 million)
- Reducing 55 school counselor/graduation coach positions ($4.5 million)Reducing 112 custodian positions ($3.9 million)
- Eliminating 100 buses, corresponding routes and driver positions ($2.9 million)
- Reducing high-priority pay account ($2.3 million)
- Restructuring alternative education program ($2 million)
- Reducing Maintenance Department ($1.1 million)
- Reducing 20 Additional Day funding ($1 million)
- Decreasing instructional supply allotment ($1 million)
- Reducing school year by five days ($1 million)
- Increasing transportation fee for field trips ($190,860)
- Parking buses within five miles of first pick up ($75,000)
- Redirecting contributions for dental coverage for all employees ($750,000)
- Reducing to state-allotted sick-leave accrual ($183,000)
- Reducing substitute pay by $10 per day ($799,888)
Increasing class sizes creates the greatest budget cost-savings – as class sizes increase the district needs fewer teachers. Earlier this month, the Georgia Department of Education waived all restrictions on class size to help school districts across the state contend with the economic crisis. In Cobb, where class sizes already were well below the state maximum at every grade level, schools can expect to see classes increase on average by approximately three students. That number is averaged, so some classes may be higher and others lower. As an example, core classes in high school can expect to see class sizes of no more than 35 students.
“This is uncharted territory for our school district,” said School Board Chair Lynnda Crowder-Eagle. “We’re experiencing what so many private corporations have been through in the past couple of years. I am deeply sorry that the budget we approved results in job reductions, but I have no doubt the Cobb County School District will continue to offer the very highest quality education, and our teachers and administrators will rise up to meet this challenge as they always have. Through their commitment, the Cobb County School District will persevere and maintain its reputation for academic excellence.”
Reductions in state and local revenue are the primary causes of the budget gap, but there are other factors that impact the school district’s operating budget. Cobb County tax exemptions are among the most generous in the State of Georgia. Two of the most popular exemptions are the Age 62 Exemption and the Homestead Exemption. Cobb County qualified homeowners who are age 62 or older as of January 1 are fully exempt from school property tax. Qualified homeowners are entitled to a $10,000 Homestead Exemption in the school general tax category. In total, Cobb County tax exemptions will reduce school district revenue by more than $100 million.
The approved FY2011 budget also includes more than $8.7 million in Federal funding from the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act. Those dollars no longer will be available after next school year.
In September 2008, Cobb County voters approved a five-year extension of the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax, but SPLOST funds are designated for specific capital projects and cannot be used for day-to-day General Fund operating expenditures. Therefore, SPLOST funds cannot be used to directly offset the $126.7 million General Fund deficit. However, the Board of Education was able to declare more than $23 million from the SPLOST II program as “excess funds”. For a district such as Cobb, state law requires that any excess SPLOST funds be used to lower the property tax millage rate.
Because of the current shortfall, the school board anticipates having to raise the millage rate from the current 18.9 mills to the state maximum 20.0 mills when it meets in July. Declaring SPLOST II excess proceeds equal to 1.1 mills will allow the millage rate to remain unchanged at the current rate of 18.9. The approximate value of the excess declaration is $23.6 million.
Cobb County property owners will see no change in their school property tax rate.
Details of the FY2010 Cobb County School District budget, as well as video presentations from its development, are available online at http://www.cobbk12.org/centraloffice/finance/budget.htm.
Call or Email me today for all of your Real Estate needs! Jodi Smith, East Cobb Realtor with Keller Williams Realty Consultants. Helping you find Homes in East Cobb, Homes in Marietta, Homes in Roswell and Homes in Alpharetta. CELL: 678-763-6025 or EMAIL: jodismith@kw.com
The Cobb County Board of Education has approved a balanced budget for Fiscal Year 2011 that required numerous difficult steps to address a $126.7 million shortfall. The budget gap resulted from a significant drop in the school district’s two primary sources of revenue – state funding and local property tax collections. Since 2003, the state of Georgia has implemented austerity cuts that have reduced funding for Cobb County schools by more than $208 million. Additionally, local property tax collections in 2010 decreased by approximately 10 percent.
The spending cuts and other steps taken to address the $126.7 million shortfall follow a budget year in 2010 that itself required more than $97 million in cuts, including a 2-percent pay reduction for all employees. The balanced budget presented by Superintendent Fred Sanderson and approved by the Board of Education at its June 9, 2010 work session attempts to sustain the highest level of educational service possible under the challenging economic circumstances.
“This has been an extraordinarily difficult budget cycle, the worse I’ve seen in my 35 years as an educator,” said Superintendent Sanderson. “To face this kind of deficit one year after cutting almost $100 million is hard to imagine. Under the circumstances, I believe we’ve presented a budget that takes the most equitable approach to spending reductions. Education is very personnel-oriented, and that means about 90 percent of our budget is represented by salaries for teachers and other staff. To find savings that would help close a $126 million gap, we had no choice but to cut positions, but we did so as strategically and fairly as possible. Cutting jobs is the last thing I want to do, especially in this economy, but following a year where we had already lowered all employees’ salaries, we had no better options.”
In April, the school board conducted a community-wide survey to gauge public opinion on the budget crisis. One item asked respondents to rate various cost-cutting options. Of the more than 21,000 responses, the options that received the most favorable responses included reducing the school year by five days and increasing the millage rate. The option that received the highest percentage of “unacceptable” votes was reducing pay for employees.
The FY2011 General Fund budget anticipates $819,380,347 in revenue compared to $907,469,792 in budgeted revenue for FY2010. The FY2011 budget anticipates $819,376,569 in expenditures compared to $907,466,771 in budgeted expenditures in FY2010. The budget is based on a predicted enrollment of 105,205 students. Expenditures per student total $7,788, compared to $8,648 per student in FY2010. The approved budget results will not increase the school property tax rate.
Spending reductions and other steps taken to address the $126.7 million
budget shortfall include:
- Reducing 68 central office and support positions ($8.1 million)
- Increasing to maximum class sizes and reducing 636 teaching positions ($47.4 million)
- Avoiding millage rate increase by using SPLOST II excess funds ($23.6 million)
- Five furlough days for all school district staff ($15.9 million)
- Freezing school salary step for all eligible employees ($10 million)
- Reducing 55 school counselor/graduation coach positions ($4.5 million)Reducing 112 custodian positions ($3.9 million)
- Eliminating 100 buses, corresponding routes and driver positions ($2.9 million)
- Reducing high-priority pay account ($2.3 million)
- Restructuring alternative education program ($2 million)
- Reducing Maintenance Department ($1.1 million)
- Reducing 20 Additional Day funding ($1 million)
- Decreasing instructional supply allotment ($1 million)
- Reducing school year by five days ($1 million)
- Increasing transportation fee for field trips ($190,860)
- Parking buses within five miles of first pick up ($75,000)
- Redirecting contributions for dental coverage for all employees ($750,000)
- Reducing to state-allotted sick-leave accrual ($183,000)
- Reducing substitute pay by $10 per day ($799,888)
Increasing class sizes creates the greatest budget cost-savings – as class sizes increase the district needs fewer teachers. Earlier this month, the Georgia Department of Education waived all restrictions on class size to help school districts across the state contend with the economic crisis. In Cobb, where class sizes already were well below the state maximum at every grade level, schools can expect to see classes increase on average by approximately three students. That number is averaged, so some classes may be higher and others lower. As an example, core classes in high school can expect to see class sizes of no more than 35 students.
“This is uncharted territory for our school district,” said School Board Chair Lynnda Crowder-Eagle. “We’re experiencing what so many private corporations have been through in the past couple of years. I am deeply sorry that the budget we approved results in job reductions, but I have no doubt the Cobb County School District will continue to offer the very highest quality education, and our teachers and administrators will rise up to meet this challenge as they always have. Through their commitment, the Cobb County School District will persevere and maintain its reputation for academic excellence.”
Reductions in state and local revenue are the primary causes of the budget gap, but there are other factors that impact the school district’s operating budget. Cobb County tax exemptions are among the most generous in the State of Georgia. Two of the most popular exemptions are the Age 62 Exemption and the Homestead Exemption. Cobb County qualified homeowners who are age 62 or older as of January 1 are fully exempt from school property tax. Qualified homeowners are entitled to a $10,000 Homestead Exemption in the school general tax category. In total, Cobb County tax exemptions will reduce school district revenue by more than $100 million.
The approved FY2011 budget also includes more than $8.7 million in Federal funding from the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act. Those dollars no longer will be available after next school year.
In September 2008, Cobb County voters approved a five-year extension of the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax, but SPLOST funds are designated for specific capital projects and cannot be used for day-to-day General Fund operating expenditures. Therefore, SPLOST funds cannot be used to directly offset the $126.7 million General Fund deficit. However, the Board of Education was able to declare more than $23 million from the SPLOST II program as “excess funds”. For a district such as Cobb, state law requires that any excess SPLOST funds be used to lower the property tax millage rate.
Because of the current shortfall, the school board anticipates having to raise the millage rate from the current 18.9 mills to the state maximum 20.0 mills when it meets in July. Declaring SPLOST II excess proceeds equal to 1.1 mills will allow the millage rate to remain unchanged at the current rate of 18.9. The approximate value of the excess declaration is $23.6 million.
Cobb County property owners will see no change in their school property tax rate.
Details of the FY2010 Cobb County School District budget, as well as video presentations from its development, are available online at http://www.cobbk12.org/centraloffice/finance/budget.htm.
Call or Email me today for all of your Real Estate needs! Jodi Smith, East Cobb Realtor with Keller Williams Realty Consultants. Helping you find Homes in East Cobb, Homes in Marietta, Homes in Roswell and Homes in Alpharetta. CELL: 678-763-6025 or EMAIL: jodismith@kw.com
East Cobb Middle Schools (6-8)
| Daniell Middle School
2900 Scott Road Phone: 678-594-8048 |
Dickerson Middle School
855 Woodlawn Road Phone: 770-578-2710 |
Dodgen Middle School
1725 Bill Murdock Road Phone:770-578-2726 |
East Cobb Middle School
380 Holt Road Phone:770-578-2740 |
Hightower Trail Middle School
3905 Post Oak Tritt Phone: 770-578-7225 |
| Mabry Middle School
2700 Jims Road Phone:770-928-5546 |
McCleskey Middle School
4080 Maybreeze Road Phone:770-928-5560 |
Simpson Middle School
3340 Trickum Road Phone: 770-971-4711 |
East Cobb Elementary Schools (K-5)
| Addison Elementary School
3055 Ebeneezer Road |
Bells Ferry Elementary School
2600 Bells Ferry Road |
Blackwell Elementary School
3470 Canton Road |
Brumby Elementary School
1306 Powers Ferry Road |
Davis Elementary School
2433 Jamerson Road |
| Eastside Elementary School
3850 Roswell Road |
Eastvalley Elementary School
2570 Lower Roswell Road |
Garrison Mill Elementary School
4111 Wesley Chapel Road |
Keheley Elementary School
1985 Kemp Road |
Kincaid Elementary School
1410 Kincaid Road |
| Mt. Bethel Elementary School
1210 Johnson Ferry Road |
Mt. View Elementary School
3448 Sandy Plains Road |
Murdock Elementary School
2320 Murdock Road |
Nicholson Elementary School
1599 Shallowford Road |
Powers Ferry Elementary School
1845 Powers Ferry Road |
| Rocky Mount Elementary School
2400 Rocky Mount Road |
Sedalia Park Elementary School
2230 Lower Roswell Road |
Shallowford Falls Elementary School
3529 Lassiter Road |
Sope Creek Elementary School
3320 Paper Mill Road |
Timber Ridge Elementary School
5000 Timber RidgeRoad |
| Tritt Elementary School
4435 Post Oak Tritt Road |
Hightower Trail Middle School in East Cobb Named 2009 No Child Left Behind-Blue Ribbon School
Your East Cobb Realtor would like to share this important information with YOU!
Hightower Trail Middle School is the only middle school in Georgia to be named a 2009 No Child Left Behind-Blue Ribbon School, the U.S. Department of Education announced today.

The program honors public and private schools where students achieve at the highest levels, as well as schools that make notable progress in closing the achievement gap. Hightower Trail was honored for scoring in the top 10 percent on state assessments in reading/language arts and mathematics. Hightower Trail principal Dr. Hilda Wilkins, along with teacher Angela Kardesh, will formally accept the NCLB-Blue Ribbon School award during an official ceremony Nov. 3 in Washington, DC.
The Blue Ribbon Schools program began in 1982 as a means of recognizing many of the nation’s most successful schools. In 2002, the program was updated in accordance with the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001. Schools that meet award criteria are nominated by state education officials and selected by the U.S. Department of Education. Hightower Trail is the 18th school in the Cobb County School District to be named a Blue Ribbon School since the original program’s inception and the fourth since the program’s renewal in 2002.
Hightower Trail Middle School feeds into Pope High School who had 39 AP Scholars and 4 National Scholars in 2009.
More information about the No Child Left Behind-Blue Ribbon Schools program is available on the U.S. Department of Education Web site at www.ed.gov.
Call or Email me today to see Homes For Sale in East Cobb. Jodi Smith, Realtor with Keller Williams Realty Consultants. Cell: 678-763-6025 or Email: jodismith@kw.com
Cobb County ACT Scores Rise In All Subjects
Your East Cobb Realtor would like to share this important information with YOU!
August 19, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Cobb ACT Scores Rise In All Subjects
Fifth consecutive year of improvement; top state & national averages
For the fifth consecutive year Cobb County’s college-bound seniors have improved the school district’s composite score on the ACT college-preparation test. Recently released scores show Cobb students increased their average score in every subject area of the test. Cobb students also topped state and national averages in all four subject areas, as well as in the composite average, just as they did in 2008, and even widened the margin of performance in 2009.
ACT scores for the class of 2009 indicate that Cobb graduates are well prepared for success in their first year of college. The 2009 seniors posted an average composite score of 22.1 (out of a possible 36), slightly higher than last year’s score of 22.0. The composite average was 1.5 points higher than the state average, and 1.0 points higher than the national average. Across the subject areas tested, Cobb students topped the national averages in English (+1.2), Math (+1.2), Reading (+1.1), and Science Reasoning (+0.6). The ACT assessment measures high school students’ overall educational development and their readiness for the challenge of core college classes. Cobb seniors’ composite average has topped the state and national average for 13 consecutive years.
“The ACT is valued more and more in college admissions, and these results show colleges and universities that Cobb County students are prepared for the rigors of college course work,” said Superintendent Fred Sanderson. “I’m very proud of the fact that we continue to show improvement, and our students are widening the gap between Cobb’s average and the national average in every subject.”
Students taking more rigorous classes in science or math tended to have higher ACT scores, promoting the value of enrollment in more advanced classes at the high school level. For example, Cobb students who participated in a high school math course sequence that included Algebra I and II, Geometry, Trigonometry, and Calculus, had scores more than eight points higher than students with less than three years of math coursework. Similarly, students taking advanced science classes that included General Science, Biology, Chemistry and Physics scored almost four points higher than those taking less than three years of science.
Results reflect the performance of 2,748 Cobb high school seniors (38 percent of all graduating seniors). Scores are for 2008-2009 seniors who took the ACT voluntarily in either their sophomore, junior or senior year of high school.
Scores for individual Cobb high schools are available on the District Web site.
Call or Email me today for all of your Real Estate needs! Jodi Smith, Atlanta Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Realty Consultants in Roswell, Georgia. CELL: 678-763-6025 or EMAIL: jodismith@kw.com
Cobb County SD Update for Parents Regarding H1N1 Flu
Your Atlanta Real Estate Agent would like to share this important information with YOU!
Dear Parents:
Most likely you have heard news reports about the influenza A H1N1 virus (H1N1 flu), also known as “Swine Flu” making its way into the United States. Confirmed cases continue to grow throughout the country and have been found in many summer schools and camps across the nation.
We want to share some basic information with you about H1N1 flu, how the Cobb County School District is preparing and responding and what you can do to protect your family’s health.
The most up-to-date information about H1N1 flu is available on the Web site for the Centers for Disease Control at http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/. Locally, the District works closely with Cobb & Douglas Public Health, a division of the sate public health department. CDPH provides locally relevant information online at http://cobbanddouglaspublichealth.org/News/swineflu.php.
What is H1N1 flu?
H1N1 flu (Swine Flu) is a respiratory illness that is caused by a Type A influenza virus. H1N1 is a new strain of flu that is a mix of swine, human and bird viruses. You cannot get H1N1 flu from eating pork or pork products.
What are the signs and symptoms of H1N1 flu?
The signs and symptoms of H1N1 flu are similar to regular flu. Symptoms appear quickly, likely including dry cough, fever (sometimes over 102 degrees), stuffy nose, chills, extreme tiredness and body aches. Some people have reported symptoms of nausea, vomiting and diarrhea with H1N1 flu, which are not common symptoms of more common influenza.
What should I do if my child has signs or symptoms of influenza?
If your child gets a fever or flu-like symptoms, it is important that he/she stays home, rests and drinks plenty of fluids. Please do not give give children fever-reducing medication and send them to school. The medication wears off and fevers and aches return. Never give aspirin to children or teens that have fever and/or flu-like symptoms because this can cause a rare, serious illness called Reye syndrome. Thorough hand washing with soap and water is the best prevention, in addition to the flu vaccine.
What are Cobb County Schools doing to prevent the spread of influenza?
The District is encouraging staff and students to practice good hygiene, including proper hand washing techniques. We encourage students to use hand sanitizer with 60 percent alcohol content in situations where hand washing facilities are not immediately available. The CDC also provides information on how to get immunization against influenza and H1N1 flu.
The Cobb County School District will continue to make families aware of the impact of influenza on our school environments. Awareness and prevention are the best means of helping our community stay healthy.
Call or Email me today for all of your Real Estate needs! Jodi Smith, Atlanta Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Realty Consultants in Roswell, Georgia. CELL: 678-763-6025 or EMAIL: jodismith@kw.com






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