Education

Mon BOE passes $127M budget

MORGANTOWN — Nicole Kemper had 127 million reasons to feel relieved during  Monongalia County Board of Education’s  (BOE) meeting May 29.
That’s because the board, with members Barbara Parsons and Clarence Harvey Jr. absent, voted in favor of the $127 million operating budget she put together for district, for fiscal year 2018-’19.
And before that, no one spoke against the document during the public hearing portion of the meeting.
The budget is now off to the state board in Charleston for a final checkmark.
Officially, Monongalia County’s budget clocks in at $127,795,742, with a large portion of that going to salary and classroom instruction line items, Kemper said.
About $72 million of that amount is earmarked for classroom instruction, with another $15 million allocated for facility maintenance of buildings across the district.
Kemper began working on preliminary numbers for the new budget in January.
That was a couple of weeks before teachers and other public school workers across West Virginia launched a 9-day work stoppage, in protests surrounding paychecks and benefits.
The budget is also heavily supported by Monongalia County’s regular and excess tax levies.
Two weeks ago, when Kemper first presented the document for review, BOE member Nancy Walker asked a pointed question: “So, you feel comfortable with it, and you’ll be able to sleep at night?”
The financial officer’s answer then was the same Tuesday night.
“Yes,” she said. “It’s a good budget, and I’m definitely sleeping well.”
That’s the budget incoming schools superintendent Eddie Campbell Jr., will oversee when he takes over the job July 1.
In other business, BOE officially approved his contract, as well, following the announcement of his hiring last week.
Campbell, the current superintendent the Tucker County district who has also taught and been an administrator at schools in Virginia, Alaska and China, will $150,000 annually in a two-year contract.
Mon schools chief Frank Devono, who is retiring June 30, said his replacement is ready to get going.
“I have a meeting with Dr. Campbell next week, then he’ll be back up to meet with some of our staff,” Devono said.