Vanessa Gongora joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in December of 2024. Born and raised in Southern California, her move to Tucson means she's not too far away from home.
The Tucson Unified School District was identified as one of the highest-risk school districts in Arizona for the 2024-25 fiscal year, following an audit by the Arizona Auditor General . This has prompted district leaders to announce a comprehensive financial recovery plan to cut $25 million by 2030.
The state conducts year-round financial risk analysis using 10 financial risk metrics to assess a school district's ability to operate within its cash resources and statutory budget limits. TUSD hit six of those metrics, placing it in the high risk category.The metrics are:1. Change in weighted student count2. Operating budget limit reserve3. General Fund operating margin ratio4. General Fund change in fund balance5. Capital budget limit reserve6. Capital monies redirected to operationsTUSD is one of nine school districts throughout Arizona that is in the highest-risk category. Dr. Gabriel Trujillo, TUSD superintendent, says the biggest flag for the district is the drop in enrollment.'And the revenue loss that has come with over the last four or five years, probably around an 8% or an 8.4% loss in total enrollment, which has generated a really significant loss of funding,' said Dr. Gabriel Trujillo, TUSD superintendent.He says the district is spending more than it receives and the culprit is inflation. 'Benefits, health insurance for the employees, salary and compensation costs, wages continue to rise, inflation rises, the cost of food for our students rises, the cost of fuel because of inflation, that rises, and we have utilities that have gone up,' Trujillo said. 'What we pay TEP and what we pay the city for water, all of that has gone up dramatically, but your student enrollment has gone down.'TUSD was also flagged because it has been pulling from its reserve funds, in other words savings, and capital budget to cover the gap and break even.'What's happened is now those reserves are pretty much depleted, so now we are into basically an area where we don't have a sufficient amount of reserves that the auditor general would like to see,' Trujillo said. Trujillo says they are not cash poor, but changes need to be made to be back on track.'We do have reserves to cover our expenses for the remainder of the year and even into next year, but what we have to do is take this report very,very seriously.' Trujillo said.Due to this financial scarcity, the district needs to reduce its operating expenses by $25 million in the next five years. 'No more bringing money over from reserves and savings. No more bringing money over from capital. We're going to do the hard work and it's going to start this year,' Trujillo said. 'Targeting about $10 million in reductions for next school year. So that's going to be year one and year two. We want to do another $10 or $12 million and then we want to finish in year three, so we have a full $25 million budget deficit taken care of, off of this list within the next couple of years.'Trujillo says students should not be impacted by the coming changes because of Proposition 414, the override measure that passed in November.'That infusion of dollars is going to allow us to protect the programs, the fine arts, PE, music. It's going to allow us to give staff salary increases to all of our teachers, our employees, from the support of our voters,' Trujillo said.The district plans to begin cost reductions in administrative departments not based in schools, targeting 7% reductions.'You're going to see my own leadership team in the coming months. I'm going to be reconfiguring it and we're going to operate with a smaller leadership team,' Trujillo said. TUSD presented its financial action plan at Monday's board meeting, explaining the reductions targeted over the next five years. If you want to learn more about TUSD's financial risk analysis, check out the audit by the Arizona Auditor General. You can also take a look at TUSD's Financial Risk Action Plan.If you missed the board meeting, you can watch and listen to it here. This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
Gabriel Trujillo Education Funding Financial Action Plan Prop 414 School Budget Tusd
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Vanessa Hudgens's Latest Manicure is a Cat Eye MasterpieceVanessa Hudgens showcases a stunning cat eye manicure, highlighting her impeccable taste in nail art and her ability to embrace current trends. This article explores the design's popularity and offers tips for achieving a similar look at home.
Read more »
Vanessa Hudgens Combined Cat-Eye and Polka Dots for a Hyper-Trendy ManicureNail artist Zola Ganzorigt posted the most recent in her long line of Vanessa Hudgens mani masterpieces: a peachy nude cat-eye nail polish for the base and red cat-eye for the polka dots — a doubly trendy nail look.
Read more »
ICE activity near elementary school sparks fear in Southside communityJacqueline Aguilar joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in February of 2024.
Read more »
Inspired by Tucson’s Loop, Pinal County proposes trail that connects to Pima CountyVanessa Gongora joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in December of 2024. Born and raised in Southern California, her move to Tucson means she's not too far away from home.
Read more »
Local Iranian student speaks out as tensions escalate between U.S., IranJacqueline Aguilar joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in February of 2024.
Read more »
Leaping Into Legacy: Paris Mikinski Follows Her Mother's High Jump PathJason Barr is KGUN-TV's sports reporter and anchor, and he appears regularly on KGUN newscasts.
Read more »
