More than 100 Fort Worth ISD employees learned just before spring break that they may not return next school year.
In an effort to save costs and reorganize the district, Superintendent Ang茅lica Ramsey told central administration employees on March 10 that their jobs could be cut because of declining enrollment and tighter finances.
Some positions will be eliminated and others will be merged or have new job expectations, Ramsey said in a written statement. Employees certified to teach will have the chance to return as teachers and fill some of the hundreds of classroom vacancies, she said. As of March 13, the district鈥檚 jobs board has 116 openings for elementary and secondary teachers.
On March 8, Ramsey sent an email to staff calling the meeting. A Fort Worth ISD employee shared the email with the Fort Worth Report. In her email, Ramsey wrote that, as part of her meetings with employees and an organizational audit, she鈥檚 been reviewing district operations and the budget.
In the email, Ramsey said, 鈥渟ince your position may be impacted through program changes and organizational changes, I am holding a meeting this Friday at 3:30 p.m..鈥
She went on to say in the email that the meeting is not to provide notices of specific changes, but to make employees aware of changes coming and give them time to make individual decisions.
The affected employees have three options:
- resign at the end of the school year;
- resign and apply for a new position;
- resign and retire with their Teacher Retirement System funds.
Two employees told the Report decisions must be submitted to the district by March 27 or those employees will be presented to the school board for termination and nonrenewal. Trustees are .
Ramsey said in a written statement that the change is part of ongoing efforts to address the decrease in student enrollment and a need to reallocate resources to more positively impact student learning.
Because employees are able to re-apply or seek new positions, Ramsey told the Report exactly how much money this could save is not yet available.
, Ramsey mentioned conclusions that came out of her stakeholder meetings during her first six months on the job, including some related to staff.
鈥淛ust like any other organization, we found that we have dysfunction,鈥 she said at the luncheon. 鈥淲e have to be dysfunctional because we鈥檙e made up of people. Our job is to figure out those areas and to do everything we can to fix the dysfunction.鈥
Enrollment is down. So are state funds.
One of those dysfunctions . Ramsey addressed these issues at the Women鈥檚 Policy Forum.
Currently, Fort Worth ISD has 72,811 students, according to an open records request filed by the Report. Ramsey expects will continue until the district hits a plateau of about 55,000 students.
Lower birth rates, fewer immigrants, demographic shifts, an aging population and increased competition from charter schools have fueled enrollment declines in Fort Worth ISD and across the nation, according to the , a research center focused on school finance at Georgetown University.
Ramsey also pointed to rising housing costs and neighborhood crime as more local reasons for the drop.
鈥淲e know that our solutions can鈥檛 be just for tomorrow. We need to right size the school district so that we don鈥檛 have to do it every single year,鈥 Ramsey said.
Staffing levels have not necessarily dropped alongside enrollment, according to data with the Texas Education Agency. Trustee during a school board meeting in May.
鈥淲e shouldn鈥檛 have the same number of teachers or support staff if we have less students,鈥 Rodriguez said at the time.
When funds decline, deficit follows
The enrollment decline is putting pressure on Fort Worth ISD鈥檚 finances.
In Texas, , meaning the district is getting less money from the state each year.
The district has a , which was created when trustees and administrators called for more spending than available money in the budget.
Fort Worth ISD also is dealing with a smaller pool of state funds. Lower enrollment pushed district officials to plan for a loss of $23.8 million in state funding. Since 2019, state funding to Fort Worth ISD has dropped by a third.
However, , Fort Worth ISD is property rich, and it is now sending $2 million in excess property tax revenue from local taxpayers to the state. Administrators attributed higher property values and lower enrollment as why the district is falling under the law.
Superintendent Ramsey acknowledged that the district is not where it needs to be. Employment changes are an effort to fix that, but she said it will take time and starts with a strategic plan, a document administrators are assembling.
Kristen Barton is an education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at kristen.barton@fortworthreport.org.
Jacob Sanchez is an enterprise reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at jacob.sanchez@fortworthreport.org.
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