Closing Cherry Grade School

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These seven students in Jennifer Ring’s kindergarten class at Cherry Grade School are one of the bigger classes at the school, which has a total enrollment this year of 63. A decline in enrollment and reductions in state aid have forced the board to look at closing the school and either annexing into or consolidating with another district. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt )
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CHERRY — In May 1943, Cherry High School ceased to exist.

If all goes as planned, the same fate awaits Cherry Grade School in May 2014.

A combination of evaporating state aid, shrinking property values and declining enrollment has led the Cherry Grade School Board to pursue closing the school at the end of the 2013-14 school year.

On Wednesday, Superintendent Jim Boyle said the board has asked him to prepare a presentation regarding the situation for residents. The public meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday.

Boyle said the decision has been a long time coming, dating back at least as far as July 2009, when Boyle was hired as interim superintendent.

“When I came here, I asked the board, ‘Do you want me to talk consolidation?’ and they said, ‘No, not yet,’” Boyle said.

But the financial woes came to a head in February 2012, which saw the board approve about $210,000 in working cash bonds to get through the school year.

“When we issued the bonds, that’s when we started talking because the board wanted to know how long the bonds would carry us,” Boyle said.

In December, Brent Appell from the Illinois State Board of Education visited the district to examine the current year’s budget and to do a three-year projection.

“He honestly said, ‘I’m surprised you’re not closing this year,’” Boyle said.

Appell projected a positive fund balance of $112,000 in the combined fund balances of education, operations/maintenance, transportation and working cash funds at the end of the year. However, that will also be the end of the black ink.

Appell projected a deficit of $137,000 by June 30, 2014, and that deficit would grow.

“For 2016, we’d be $710,000 in the hole,” Boyle said.

Cherry’s two major sources of funds are from local taxpayers and state aid. Boyle said the current budget calls for $377,701 in taxes and $179,496 from the state, for a total of $557,197.

That’s a problem when salaries alone are $421,784.

“That leaves $135,413 to run the school,” Boyle said. “For that we can barely turn on the lights and keep the heat going.”

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