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Officials in the San Bruno school district facing drastic cuts brought forth by an ongoing, crippling deficit are cautiously optimistic regarding a rare opportunity to improve the its historically bleak budget outlook through a possible influx of money from the state and cost savings offered by employees. The San Bruno Park Elementary School District Board of T ru stees is set to prioritize which education programs cu rrently on the choppi ng block will be the first reinstated, should the district’s financial pro- jections improve du e to the May revision of Gov. Jerry Brow n’s state budget proposal, expected to be announced this week. The board will meet Wednesday, May 13, to weigh keeping libraries open, hiring back maintenance staff whose jobs are threatened and reconsider ing a pl an to sh are princi- pals between school sites, should the district’s budget projections improve. Officials approved cutting those programs last month, to develop a budget that proved fiscal solvency over coming years, with an eye on restoring the services should the state budget include more money for public schools than was initially anticipated. And as indications coming from the Capito l are that the st ate’ s budg- et has grown, leaving more money for education, San Bruno officials are hopeful the new budget will allow them to keep in place essen- tial programs.
“Am I optimistic? Yes,” said Gary Pettinari, head of the district’s clas- sified union. “I hope the May revise, and the actual bu dget, is a li t- tle sweeter than was originally stat- ed.” Concurrent to the rosy projection from the state, the board stands to consider a recomme ndation to over- haul the district’s special education transportation program by using classified workers, which could be a sour ce of ongoing savings. The county’s chief elections officer is urging all jurisdictions with scheduled elections this November to participate in a pilot program to have all ballots cast by mail ra ther than at the po lls. The program will hopefully increase voter turnout, produce faster results, reduce risk of error and d ecrea se election s cost s, Mark Churc h, San Mateo County’s chief elections officer and assessor- county clerk-record er, tol d the San Carlos City Council Monday night. The council then voted 4-0 to joi n the pil ot prog ram, which is an effort by the state Legislature to provi de “a c om- plete picture of the effects of all-mail ballot elections,” Church said. Yolo and San Mateo counties are participating in the pilot, which was approved by state law- makers in Au gust with th e passage of Assembly Bill 2028, authored by Assemblyman Kevin Mullin, D-South San Francisco.