District funding is based primarily on average daily attendance money, given by the state for each day a student is in school. And Tracy Unified lost more than 100 students this year at the middle school level.
According to Casey Goodall, the assistant superintendent for business services, Monte Vista Middle School’s enrollment went from 879 students to 828 this year, while Williams Middle School’s enrollment dropped from 1,191 to 1,120. He said he had no idea what caused the decline.
With fewer students, Goodall said, the district is looking at a loss of $658,752, which is a figure calculated by the county office of education. He said that equals about $441 per student.
Goodall said Tracy saw a 6 percent annual growth in student enrollment in the years after World War II, but that number dropped during the economic downturn in 2007-08. At that time, Tracy Unified lost 150 to 200 students, he said.
Last year, the numbers were stable, and during the previous two years, local schools enrolled about 50 fewer students annually, compared with a drop of 122 this year at the middle schools alone.
At the high school and elementary levels, however, the changes in enrollment were less dramatic, he said.
Tracy Unified Superintendent James Franco said the district will make every effort to assure that children attend school each day. A 98 percent attendance rate is the stated goal.
Goodall said the reality is usually closer to 95 percent attendance. The numbers are tracked by each school principal and differ from school to school.
During the district’s board meeting Tuesday, Aug. 28, Goodall said Tracy Unified and other districts across the state are depending on Gov. Jerry Brown’s tax initiative to help them out financially.
Proposition 30, which will appear on the Nov. 6 ballot, would increase income taxes by 3 percent on households earning more than $1 million; by 2 percent on households earning $600,000 to $1 million; and by 1 percent on households earning $500,000 to $600,000. All those increases are slated to expire after seven years.
The initiative would also increase the state’s sales tax by a quarter-cent per dollar spent for four years.
Goodall said Brown needs the tax, which is estimated by Brown’s office to raise about $8 billion in additional revenues early next year, to balance the state budget.
If a majority of voters approves the tax initiative, Goodall said, state officials have promised to make no further reductions in funding for kindergarten through 12th-grade education. He said that would guarantee that Tracy Unified would maintain a fiscally sound budget for the next three fiscal years. He said the district could deal with reductions of $275.36 per student in average daily attendance funding without making further cuts.
Without the initiative, though, Tracy Unified might have to make $4 million in cuts as of July, which Goodall described as a “pretty devastating reduction.”
According to an Aug. 22 poll by University of Southern California, 55 percent of likely voters who were surveyed said they supported Prop. 30, Goodall said. He said the people he had spoken with ranged from those who had never heard of Prop. 30 to those who knew a little about it.
Board member Walter Gouveia said that without Prop. 30 funds, 180 school districts across the state would find themselves in receivership next year. Receivership is a process in which local school officials are no longer in charge and state-appointed officials take over day-to-day operation of schools.
“We’re not one of the 180,” board member James Vaughn stressed. “We’re in good shape.”
But Goodall said that without some form of tax support, 1,000 school districts will be in receivership in two years, and all of the state’s districts would probably end up in that situation by the third year.
At the next Tracy Unified board meeting, scheduled for Sept. 11, Goodall said he would return with an update on the district’s finances after officials complete their annual audit.
n Contact Denise E. Rizzo at 830-4225 or drizzo@tracypress.com.


As to wondering where the students have gone, their homes were foreclosed and their parents left the state to find work.
As to Proposition 30 helping schools - baloney! There are too many other projects like the Bullet Train to nowhere. No amount of money will help California until it stops spending. What is our legislature working on- banning plastic bags and giving illegal immigrants driver's - where is the budget cutting?????
www.calottery.com (look under giving back tab)
You can go to tracy unified's website and see how much of the budget goes to employee costs and you can also go to google and find out how many people left the state of California in 2011.
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/06/law-enforcement-arrest-officials-hiding-cafr-tax-surplus-billions-trillions.html
http://www.darkpolitricks.com/2012/06/cafr-tax-surplus-trillions-senator-liu-assemblyperson-portantino-heroes-or-minions/
http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/08/15/califs-broke-parks-dept-discovers-it-has-3-billion-in-secret-surplus/
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/06/ca-cafr-local-paper-publishes-2nd-letter-asking-liu-portantino-responses.html
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/07/l-a-county-d-a-cafr-billions-non-disclosure-not-a-crime-but-wont-explain.html
http://www.examiner.com/article/ca-cafr-600-billion-pension-investment-fund-nets-just-1-billion
You are pushing an idiotic conspiracy theory that has been thorougly debunked (http://www.reddit.com/r/conspiracy/comments/f290z/cafr_conspiracy_debunked/)
Do you also believe in chemtrails, that the US government was responsible for 911 and that the moon landing was fake?
Sneaky seems to have the idiot approach of a 14-year old brat.
The CAFR is local government's "Statement of Net Worth" from the get-go of that local government. Decades of wealth accumulation. A budget is a selectively created "projection" of expenses for "a year". A budget report is what has been spoon fed the public as the CAFR never a peep or mention of for over 65-years DUE TO THE WEALTH and true showing of gross income involved.
There is no conspiracy just hard facts. When people look they find their local government CAFR and learn. A Google search will pull up many.
And SLEAZY SNEAKY your diatribe attack against myself is deserving of your immature mentality of being an immature brat. I have been in survival mode for the last 15-years. Your type being exposed to the same they would be scraping you off the pavement with a butter knife seven times over.
Local government scum do not play fair. If they want to destroy your business and family, they do so, and they did. Has been no fun in that respect over the last decade. I have lost much but being a good fighter maintain focus on the disclosures necessary and at hand.
Your drivel is worthy of the TV Guide gossip corner. The shotgun approach of BS splattered hoping to catch the eye of the unsuspecting to qualify your shriveling BB's as having some importance.
My BIO is posted on my site at CAFR1.com/BIO.html
The crap I have had to go through with the destruction of my business and family as seen in my court pleadings (over 10,000 pages) is openly posted by myself at CAFR1.com/Court/
The true issue is for people to look through their local government CAFRs to see and learn. City; County; School District; Enterprise; and Government financial / pension funds.
The more interesting BIO though would be yours SLEAZY SNEAKY. People need a good laugh now a day and the ability to identify DS before they step in it.
All from Tracy should find it interesting reading. It is from 2009 but seeing this 2009 report will make it that much easier for the locals to track down the 2012 report:
http://www.tracy.k12.ca.us/Board/Board Meeting Agendas/_Archives - 2010 Board Agendas/01.12.10 Board Agenda/Tracy USD 09 Audit Report.pdf
tracy.k12.ca.us/Board/Board Meeting Agendas/_Archives - 2010 Board Agendas/01.12.10 Board Agenda/Tracy USD 09 Audit Report.pdf