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LEF sees losses from school budget
cuts – May 13, 2004
By Leslie Nicholson / Lexington
Minuteman
Over the past 13 years, more than $1.5 million in private
donations, along with equal contributions of volunteer time
and effort, have allowed the Lexington Education Foundation
(LEF) to contribute energetically to the quality of our
public schools. LEF grants afford our teachers the
opportunity to bring innovation and imagination into every
classroom, through initiatives beyond the reach of the
school operating budget. The foundation's long track record
includes the development of vibrant programs such as Big
Backyard, Teacher Mentoring, and Writing Across the
Curriculum - successes that stand out even against the
backdrop of consistent excellence in Lexington schools.
This year, however, LEF has observed the early warning signs
of erosion in the quality of Lexington schools. In 2003, for
the first time, we saw dedicated teachers - former LEF grant
recipients - laid off and quickly hired by other school
systems. We witnessed the first occurrence of a teacher
returning an LEF grant because her position had been
terminated. We saw a successful grant recipient and Summer
Fellow resign to take a job elsewhere due to job insecurity.
These losses of talent and experience reverberate throughout
the system, depriving students of expertise this community
paid to develop, and leaving behind colleagues with flagging
morale and increased workloads. Committed educators are the
front line in our schools; when they leave, they take with
them years of knowledge and experience, cultivated by
Lexington dollars.
The tensions in our town budget are real. In search of
creative solutions, some community members have looked to
LEF to help alleviate budget shortfalls. While LEF has a
critical role to play in supporting excellence in the
schools, it relies on the town to provide adequate funding
for budget basics such as salaries, buildings, books and
supplies. Why not shift some of these expenses to private
organizations such as LEF?
The school's budget gap this year cannot be bridged by any
Lexington-based fund-raising organization. Compare LEF's
$240,000 grant pool (2004) with the $3.2 million of school
expenses at risk in the June 8 override and you quickly see
the problem. Without the requested $3.2 million in school
funding, Lexington schools will experience growth in class
sizes due to staff lay-offs; cuts in sports programs; losses
in curriculum, technology, textbooks, supplies, and more.
(The full list is available at the town Web site:
ci.lexington.ma.us ).
Private fundraising cannot restore losses of this magnitude
- nor should it. The unpredictability of private fundraising
can hamper fiscal planning, and reliance on donations can
make schools vulnerable to the influence of private
contributors, potentially creating uneven support across
schools and programming.
With help from generous supporters, LEF will continue to do
its part by ensuring that educators have access to grants
that improve instructional practices and support creative
responses to reductions in resources. And we rely on the
residents of the town to do their part - to be informed and
active participants in the town's ballot process. We urge
residents to learn about the budget decisions we all face
and to participate actively in this real-life civics lesson
for Lexington's children. The outcome of this particular
lesson - which culminates in the vote on June 8 - will be
felt in every classroom next year, making a daily difference
in the lives of over 6,000 of our young citizens.
Leslie Nicholson is the president of LEF.
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