BOE begins planning for 2022-23 budget

PINE PLAINS — Just a few weeks into the new school semester, the Pine Plains Central School District (PPCSD) Board of Education (BOE) began planning for next year during a budget development presentation by Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Monica LaClair.

The Wednesday, Jan. 19, meeting was held via Zoom at 7 p.m. LaClair outlined her approach, saying, “For me, an annual school budget is a year-round process. It’s not something that starts in one month and ends in another.”

The budget development goals, she said, should include ensuring the highest quality of teaching and learning for all students; maintaining financial stability; allocating funds to reflect the PPCSD’s goals and visions; and continuing the district’s long-term planning.

A month-by-month time line was then presented, starting with a September review of the current school year and ending with an April budget adoption.

As part of the budget development process different factors will be reviewed, including staffing and facilities needs and the impact of program changes and long-range plans.

While reviewing the current budget, LaClair looked for what was spent versus what was budgeted, she took class size/enrollment, high-needs students, transportation requests/repairs and maintenance costs into account.

As a quick budget overview, LaClair reminded the BOE that the 2021-22 budget totaled $34,175,675, its tax levy totaled $24,710,043 and its state aid came to $7,971,758.

For the 2022-23 year, LaClair reported state aid is uncertain at this point.

“The way our Foundation Aid works is Pine Plains is technically over-funded,” she said, “so when Foundation Aid was frozen, it was frozen at a point in time when our enrollment was very high. So as our enrollment decreased, our Foundation Aid did not decrease accordingly.”

Moving along, LaClair said the state aid consumer price index (CPI) has been calculated at 2% and the growth factor is 1.0104. That puts the growth factor at the third highest in the county and will allow Pine Plains to increase the tax cap above the state’s 2%.

As for expenditures, LaClair factored in inflation, health insurance rates, Employee Retirement System rates, Teacher Retirement System rates and special education costs. She also considered the unsettled administrator contract and the district’s plans to purchase two new buses (which will have to be approved by taxpayers).

“We are in messy, uncertain times,” LaClair said, “and I’m learning to embrace the messiness. It may not be pretty, it may not be easy, but everybody I’ve been working with so far… they’ve been absolutely wonderful.”

Latest News

Webutuck school budget gets airing

AMENIA — The Board of Education of the North East (Webutuck) Central School District held a public hearing on the 2024-25 budget on Monday, May 6.

The hearing, held in the high school’s library, drew a small crowd that included five students who also were part of a presentation on a school program on climate and culture.

Keep ReadingShow less
Afghan artists find new homes in Connecticut

The Good Gallery, located next to The Kent Art Association on South Main Street, is known for its custom framing, thanks to proprietor Tim Good. As of May, the gallery section has greatly expanded beyond the framing shop, adding more space and easier navigation for viewing larger exhibitions of work. On Saturday, May 4, Good premiered the opening of “Through the Ashes and Smoke,” featuring the work of two Afghan artists and masters of their crafts, calligrapher Alibaba Awrang and ceramicist Matin Malikzada.

This is a particularly prestigious pairing considering the international acclaim their work has received, but it also highlights current international affairs — both Awrang and Malikzada are now recently based in Connecticut as refugees from Afghanistan. As Good explained, Matin has been assisted through the New Milford Refugee Resettlement (NMRR), and Alibaba through the Washington Refugee Resettlement Project. NMRR started in 2016 as a community-led non-profit supported by private donations from area residents that assist refugees and asylum-seeking families with aid with rent and household needs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Students share work at Troutbeck Symposium

Students presented to packed crowds at Troutbeck.

Natalia Zukerman

The third annual Troutbeck Symposium began this year on Wednesday, May 1 with a historical marker dedication ceremony to commemorate the Amenia Conferences of 1916 and 1933, two pivotal gatherings leading up to the Civil Rights movement.

Those early meetings were hosted by the NAACP under W.E.B. Du Bois’s leadership and with the support of hosts Joel and Amy Spingarn, who bought the Troutbeck estate in the early 1900s.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Creators:
Gabe McMackin's ingredients for success

The team at the restaurant at the Pink House in West Cornwall, Connecticut. Manager Michael Regan, left, Chef Gabe McMackin, center, and Chef Cedric Durand, right.

Jennifer Almquist

The Creators series is about people with vision who have done the hard work to bring their dreams to life.

Michelin-award winning chef Gabe McMackin grew up in Woodbury, Connecticut next to a nature preserve and a sheep farm. Educated at the Washington Montessori School, Taft ‘94, and Skidmore College, McMackin notes that it was washing dishes as a teenager at local Hopkins Inn that galvanized his passion for food and hospitality into a career.

Keep ReadingShow less