n LOUDOUN
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VOL. 7, NO. 8
Pg. 8 | n EDUCATION
Pg. 10 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
Pg. 12 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
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Pg. 22
JANUARY 13, 2022
Ziegler Seeks 7.5% Local Funding Increase for Schools LOUDOUN NOW STAFF REPORT
completely non-verbal and need high levels of support to meet basic needs. In December, the CDC announced that data collected from 2018 found that one in 44 8-year-old children in the U.S. has an ASD diagnosis, up from one in 54 in 2016. The demand for therapies
Loudoun County Public Schools Superintendent Scott Ziegler introduced his proposed $1.6 billion budget Jan. 5, seeking a 5.9% increase over the current fiscal year budget, and to bring International Baccalaureate to Loudoun schools, foreign languages to elementary schools and an average 5% raise for teachers. The spending plan, this year titled the “Superintendent’s Estimate of Needs,” would require a 7.5% increase in local tax funding to a total of $1.09 billion, $75.6 million more than this year. The year-over-year growth in the budget will once again outpace student enrollment growth. The student population is projected to grow by 1.7%, to an estimated 83,039. That total is 3.3% lower than the enrollment projections—projections that proved too high—that formed the base of the current budget, about 3,000 fewer students. The proposed spending increase, Ziegler said, is driven by climbing health insurance costs, increases in teacher salaries and the highest level of inflation since 1982. Of the $88.5 million increase over the current year’s budget, $80.2 million is attributed to employee compensation and the launch of a collective bargaining program. The school district is also seeing the population of students who need additional support, such as English language learners, grow more quickly than the population overall. He said $11.9 million was needed just to keep up with inflation. Ziegler said the school system’s proposed spending works out to $18,779 per student, which he said was one of the lowest per-pupil expenditures in the Washington, DC region. The per-pupil cost is 9.6% increase over the current year and 23% over the FY21 budget. The statewide average cost per student is $12,216. Enrollment coming in lower than previous projections was a sticking point for School Board members. “We would like to see how we can justify the increase in the budget, even though we have a reduction in the enrollment,”
AUTISM continues on page 20
SCHOOLS BUDGET continues on page 21
Hayley Bour/Loudoun Now
Johanna Van Doren-Jackson, senior manager for Infant and Toddler Connection, called the increased prevalence of autism spectrum disorders among children “very concerning.”
Families Grapple with Growing Autism Rates Amid Pandemic BY HAYLEY MILON BOUR hbour@loudounnow.com
The rate of Autism Spectrum Disorders diagnoses climbed by more than 12% in two years according to the latest CDC report released last month, and Loudoun families are navigating therapies and interventions at a time when child development already is stunted by pandemic-re-
lated isolation. Families are already battling the impacts of the pandemic on young children, which the CDC says includes children’s social, emotional, and mental well-being. The condition manifests a range of traits, from strengths to deficits, to various degrees. Some autistic people are able to live typical lives needing minimal support, while others are
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