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South West Illinois News

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Grand Prairie Community Consolidated School District 6 placed on financial "Review" list by state board of education

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The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) has placed Grand Prairie Community Consolidated School District 6 on its financial "Review" list.

ISBE rates school districts on their fund balance and expenditure-to-revenue ratios, days of cash on hand, and percentage of remaining short- and long-term borrowing ability.

Of Illinois' 852 school districts, 632, or 74 percent, earned the state's "Financial Recognition" designation, suggesting they are fiscally sound.

The other 26 percent statewide, of 220 districts, received lower marks from ISBE, suggesting they need work:

154 (18 percent) are under "Financial Review"

47 (6 percent) were given an "Early Warning"

19 (2 percent) are under "Financial Watch", including Chicago Public Schools and seven others in the Metro-East.

In Clinton County, 9 of the county's 17 school districts (52 percent) earned the "Financial Recognition" designation.

Willow Grove School District 46 was the only district placed under "Early Warning."

6 districts -- Aviston School District 21, Bartelso School District 57, Grand Prairie Community Consolidated School District 6, Breese Elementary School District 12, Central City School District 133, South Central Community Unit School District 401 -- were placed under "Financial Review."

Centralia High School District 200 was the only district placed under "Financial Watch."

ISBE reports that districts are increasingly "borrowing to obtain needed cash flow" and "continue to issue long-term debt to sustain day-to-day operations."

Schools are "continuing to break even or are spending more than they are realizing in revenue," the report says.

Illinois public school districts issued $307.2 million in long-term debt in fiscal year 2015 versus $356.5 million in fiscal year 2014. In 2015, 499 -- or 58 percent-- spent more money than they took in, borrowing or using taxpayer-provided reserves to cover the deficit.

ISBE's "School District Financial Profile" was first issued in 2003.

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