No more teachers, no more books?

What cuts are coming?

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The state of Illinois doesn’t have a budget and legislators aren’t returning to Springfield until Tuesday. But school officials across the state are already bracing for the worst.

“We’ll know in the next couple of weeks what’s going to happen,” said Bureau Valley School Superintendent Terry Gutshall. “Some of the things that could be affected are obviously near and dear to us.”

On Tuesday, Gutshall and other superintendents across the state received a message from State Superintendent Christopher A. Koch.

“The Illinois State Board of Education faces potential cuts to many state funded appropriation line items in the FY10 budget,” Koch wrote. “While we await the approval of an FY 2010 budget, the agency strongly urges that districts make no expenditures in anticipation of state funded grants for FY 2010 which began July 1.”

It’s a little bit too late for that.

“Well, shoot, we’ve already hired all these people back,” Gutshall said. “We have to do that in March, and then they tell us two days ago, don’t use these funds.”

Included in the list of state funded budget line items that could face substantial cuts include such things as preschool and early childhood programs and alternative schools.

Gutshall said programs were created, people were hired, supplies were purchased, and parents made plans to send their children, all based on the state’s promise to pay.

Now, that might not happen.

“We haven’t made any cuts yet, but I imagine at our July board meeting I’ll be sharing with our board these many different potential programs that could be affected if the state does not get a budget in place,” Gutshall said.

Even if a budget is approved, schools might still be in trouble. The so-called “Doomsday budget” that Gov. Pat Quinn vetoed before the end of the session would have created the need for nearly $500 million in cuts from the state’s education budget.

Those cuts will come on top of money the schools didn’t receive this year. Gutshall didn’t have the final numbers, but he said Bureau Valley was about $730,000 short on expected revenues in the areas of transportation, special education and preschool. Preschool payments alone were short about $81,000.

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