mokena school district 159.4

Mokena 159 Board Approves Amended Budget Amid Transparency, Deficit Concerns

Spread the love

The Mokena School District 159 Board of Education approved an amended budget for fiscal year 2025 in a contentious 6-1 vote Wednesday night, following sharp criticism from a board member and several residents over transparency and a projected $1.96 million deficit.

The final vote came after a lengthy public hearing and discussion where Board member Kelli MacMillan, the lone dissenting vote, detailed her concerns, which she had previously outlined in a formal email to the administration. The administration and the district’s auditor defended the budget, stating that their practices are compliant and that the deficit is a planned, temporary measure, not a structural problem.

During the public comment portion of the meeting, residents Sara Guldan and Sara Caris echoed concerns about the budget. Their questions set the stage for a debate that centered on the clarity and accuracy of the district’s financial reporting.

In a May 16 email included in the public meeting packet, MacMillan asserted that the district’s financial documents were inconsistent and did not align with Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) principles. “The tentative amended budget form, currently posted for public review, does not correlate to the skyward financial reports or the slide presentation in boardbook,” MacMillan wrote. “These inconsistencies prevent the Board from having a reliable, unified picture of the district’s financial position and violate GASB’s principles of transparency and comparability.”

MacMillan also pointed out that dozens of line items have exceeded their budgeted amounts without adjustments in the amended budget, undermining its credibility. She questioned why a deficit reduction plan had not been initiated or discussed with the board.

In a presentation to the board, Chief School Business Official Dr. Teri Shaw addressed the issues, explaining that the total difference between the original and amended budget expenses is a 1.16% increase. She noted that state funding and grant approvals often become available after the initial budget is passed, necessitating amendments.

Dr. Shaw’s report also included a detailed response to MacMillan’s email, both from herself and from the district’s auditing firm, Lauterbach & Amen. The auditor’s memo, dated June 9, stated, “As the district auditors, we have not found any lack of transparency or inaccurate reporting.” The firm noted that budgets are a reflection of “probable revenues and expenses” and that individual line items are not expected to match actual spending perfectly. They also stated that a formal budget amendment is only required by the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) if changes are greater than 10% of an aggregate fund.

Dr. Shaw explained the deficit was largely due to timing and the district’s use of modified cash basis accounting. “In FY22, projects were not paid due to incomplete work in the Fund 21 Referendum fund. This caused a significant amount of deficit in the subsequent years,” she wrote in her report. “The deficit is reflective of paying for projects from the predecessor year as well as the current year. This is not a recurring deficit.”

According to a summary provided by Dr. Shaw, ISBE does not require Mokena 159 to file a deficit reduction plan.

The amended fiscal year 2025 budget projects total revenues of $26.9 million and total expenditures of $28.9 million, resulting in a deficit of $1.96 million. The district’s end-of-year fund balance is projected to be approximately $14 million, which represents 49% of annual expenditures, within the board’s policy range of 33% to 65%.

Voting to approve the amended budget were President Jim Andresen, Vice-President Samantha Tunney, Anna Briscoe, Eric Bush, Julie Oost, and Lisa Zielinski. Kelli MacMillan voted against the measure.

Events

No events

Latest News Stories

Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Library Board of Trustees for June 24, 2025

The Library Board of Trustees unanimously approved its annual working budget after amending the family programs line to $25,000. The board is also moving forward with long-term financial planning, having...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary: Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees for June 25, 2025

The Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees met on Wednesday, June 25, 2025. Key actions included the approval of the fiscal year 2026 budget after a contentious debate and hearing...
Mokena Logo Graphic.5

Mokena Enacts Local Grocery Tax to Avert $850,000 Revenue Loss

The Mokena Village Board has moved to preserve a crucial revenue stream, unanimously approving a new local grocery tax to replace state-collected funds that will disappear in 2026. The move...
Mokena Logo Graphic.6

Mokena Dissolves Two Committees to Streamline Development Process

In a bid to become more business-friendly, the Village of Mokena is dissolving two of its long-standing advisory committees to accelerate the process for new development. Mayor George J. Metanias...
Mokena Police Logo Graphic

Mokena Police to Get New Axon In-Car Cameras in $176K Deal

The Mokena Police Department is set to receive a significant technology upgrade after the Village Board approved a five-year, $176,526 contract with Axon Enterprise for a new in-car video system....
Callery Pear trees

Mokena Targets Invasive Callery Pear Trees for Removal

The Village of Mokena is taking proactive steps to improve its urban forest by removing dozens of invasive Callery Pear trees from public parkways, funded in part by a grant...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Mokena Village Board for June 23, 2025

The Mokena Village Board took several major actions at its June 23 meeting, including approving a new local grocery tax to head off a projected $850,000 revenue loss after the...
mokena school district 159.4

Mokena 159 Board Approves Amended Budget Amid Transparency, Deficit Concerns

The Mokena School District 159 Board of Education approved an amended budget for fiscal year 2025 in a contentious 6-1 vote Wednesday night, following sharp criticism from a board member...
mokena school district 159.3

Mokena 159 Board Signals Support for Recording Meetings After Public Push

Following requests from several residents, the Mokena School District 159 Board of Education on Wednesday discussed and expressed broad support for recording and publicly posting its meetings to increase transparency....
Wayfinder

District 159 Adopts ‘Wayfinder’ Program to Boost Middle Schoolers’ Social-Emotional Health

Mokena Junior High School students will have a new curriculum focused on social-emotional learning (SEL) next year after the Board of Education unanimously approved the adoption of the "Wayfinder" program....
mokena school district 159.3

Mokena 159 Principals Report End-of-Year Academic Progress, Focus on Writing

Principals from Mokena School District 159 presented their end-of-year School Improvement Plan (SIP) updates to the Board of Education on Wednesday, highlighting student progress with a particular focus on improving...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Mokena School District 159 for June 18, 2025

The Mokena School District 159 Board of Education met on June 18, 2025. The board approved an amended budget for the upcoming fiscal year after significant debate. It also signaled...
Will-County-Board-Meeting-June-18-2025

Will County Board Halts Transportation Plan After Contentious 143rd Street Debate

The Will County Board voted Wednesday to send its five-year, multi-million dollar transportation improvement plan back to committee, effectively pausing all projects after a lengthy and heated debate over the...
Will-County-Board-Meeting-June-18-2025

Will County Board Upholds Zoning Denials, Rejecting Developer Appeals

The Will County Board on Wednesday backed its Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC), denying two separate appeals from property owners who sought to overturn the commission’s recommendations against their projects....
Will-County-Board-Meeting-June-18-2025

Split Vote Halts Monee Truck Terminal Project

A proposed truck terminal on vacant land at West Monee-Manhattan Road in Monee Township was stopped in its tracks Wednesday after the Will County Board delivered a split decision on...