The Atlanta Board of Education adopted the fiscal 2015 General Fund Budget for Atlanta Public Schools by a 6-3 vote during a special legislative meeting today, April 22.

The budget of $658 million will provide additional resources to the curriculum and instruction in the following areas:

· Fine arts and foreign language programs to ensure equity across the district from elementary school to high school

· Investing approximately 1 million dollars as part of a three-year, $3 million dollar commitment in the district’s Physical Education Department to reduce childhood obesity in Atlanta

· Investing $4 million in the district’s Student Support Team, which exists in every school and is comprised of teachers, administrators, resource professionals and parents, who work together to improve student performance

· Providing enhanced technology and support for APS classrooms to improve the reliability and use of computer equipment by students and teachers

· Expanding the Atlanta Virtual Academy, a tuition-free online learning program designed to increase the number of flexible learning opportunities and to increase the graduation rate

This budget also reflects a salary increase for the following APS employees:
• All part-time and hourly employees will receive 5 percent increase in hourly rate
• Full-time employees who have not experienced a salary change in last two years will receive a step increase or equivalent
• Full-time employees who have not experienced a salary change in last four years will receive an additional step increase or equivalent
• All full-time employees will receive $1,000 one-time payment, with two exceptions
– employees hired after January 1, 2014 would receive only $500 one-time payment
– employees receiving two-step increase would receive no one-time payment

The total cost of the pay increases is approximately $15 million, including benefits.

The district’s operating budget increase from $595 million in FY14 to $658 million in FY15 is primarily due to increased revenues from rising property tax collections and a small increase in the state’s education funding allotment to APS. The budget does not include a millage rate increase for residents or furlough days for APS employees.

“This budget will impact our core function – to raise student achievement – by expanding the resources we provide to our students, schools and employees,” said APS Superintendent Erroll Davis.

For more information on the  budget, visit this link.

Collin Kelley is the executive editor of Atlanta Intown, Georgia Voice, and the Rough Draft newsletter. He has been a journalist for nearly four decades and is also an award-winning poet and novelist.

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