Ed budget up 3.64 percent

KENT — At its regular monthly meeting on Thursday, April 7, the Kent Board of Education voted unanimously to approve a proposed 2011-12 budget of $3,876,088. The education total is $6,446,941 when Kent’s portion of the Region One budget is added in. The regional education budget includes tuition for Kent students at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, Pupil Services (which includes special education) and the regional administration office. The total amount is a 3.64 percent increase over this year’s budget. The fiscal year begins July 1. Key changes made this year were a 2.6 percent increase in teachers’ salaries and the addition of a full-time math specialist for Kent Center School, which upped the budgeted amount for teachers’ salaries by 4.84 percent. The funding for substitute teachers was raised by 48.21 percent, a change of $6,750 from this year’s budget. The change was due to severe underbudgeting in this fiscal year, when $14,000 was budgeted for substitute teachers. The estimated actual amount spent on substitutes so far this year is $20,200. “We’ve had some professional meetings that require teachers to be out of the building during the day,” said Board of Education Chairman Tracy Horosky of the increase. The budgeted amount for legal services went up 180 percent, due to the fact that this will be a contract negotiation year for the teachers. The amount that it will cost for legal services is not yet known, so the board estimated $7,000 over the $2,500 that is budgeted in years when negotiations are not scheduled.The budgeted amount for textbooks went up 114.29 percent, an increase of $15,000 from this year’s $7,000. The money will pay for new math textbooks and reading materials for the students. The budget was already presented to the Board of Finance even though it hadn’t been formally approved by the Board of Education. The formal presentation of the education budget was made to the Board of Finance on Tuesday, April 12. Taxpayers will have a chance to vote on the education and municipal budgets at a town meeting in May.

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