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Council moves South Norwalk school plan ahead
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Norwalk Common Council approves joint efficiency study with Board of Ed
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A stencil at Marvin Elementary School in August, 2020.
NORWALK, Conn. The “cliff” feared by Norwalk Public Schools now has a dollar figure attached to it – 27 million.
If you assume the City continues its “0% increase” for school funding in the 2022-23 operating budget as it’s doing for 2021-22, then the “cliff,” the amount of schools’ increase that will result three years down the road when the federal COVID-19 funds dry up, could be 13%, Norwalk Public Schools Chief Financial Officer Thomas Hamilton said at Tuesday’s Common Council meeting.
The Council held a largely ceremonial review of the operating budget, affirming approval of the Board of Estimate and Taxation’s plan in the absence of any action needed by Council members. There will be no tax increase for Norwalk citizens due to the American Rescue Plan, passed by Congress after the Council set its cap, Finance Committee Chairman Greg Burnett (D-At Large) explained. City-side expenses will be offset
Correction, 11:36 p.m.: Season pass holders can book tee times eight days in advance.
NORWALK, Conn. The Oak Hills Park Authority is well into the black as it gets through the winter, treasurer Joe Andrasko said Thursday.
Andrasko also said golf course season passes will be much more expensive this summer and that negotiations with a new restaurateur are 90-95% complete, with a vote on a lease expected next week.
Hint: A Dry Dock truck was seen in the parking lot recently.
As you’d expect, no rounds were played in February, given the snow cover, Andrasko told the Common Council Finance Committee. It’s “pretty par for the course” that the Authority uses a line of credit to pay its expenses through this seasonal revenue drought but “the difference this year is really in our cash balance” – there’s $267,000 in the bank, with no borrowing, he said.