BBA announces 2.2 percent tuition increase
By Andrew McKeever
GNAT-TV News Project
MANCHESTER — Burr and Burton Academy has announced it will be raising tuition costs for area school districts considered “sending districts” by 2.2 percent for the coming school year.
The school announced on Monday, Nov.20, that their board of trustees had voted during a meeting on Nov. 6 to increase tuition to $17,065 for the 2018-19 school year. Currently, tuition for students from Danby, Dorset, Dover, Londonderry, Landgrove, Manchester, Mt. Tabor, Peru, Stratton, Sunderland, Weston and Winhall is $16,700.
For students who attend the grade 9-12 independent school from other towns, the current tuition cost is $17,700, and that will increase to $18,065, which translates into a 2.06 percent increase.
“We are, of course, aware of the pressure on the education fund, and as it turns out, this rate of increase is slightly less than the increase referenced by Governor Scott in his letter of Nov. 14,” the statement announcing the tuition increase stated. “This increase is also less than the increase in teacher salaries for next year.”
The statement added that Burr and Burton works hard to keep tuition increases low, and the average annual increase since 2010 has been 2.75 percent.
The letter sent by Gov. Scott to education leaders across the state on Nov. 14 referenced in the announcement restated many of the Governor’s themes that touch on education. While Vermont wants and needs an education system that is competitive with every state, budget pressures and costs to Vermonters through the property tax need to be kept in check as well. Finding the balance point between the two will be a challenge for many school boards, but one he felt they were equal to, he stated in the letter.
But education costs keep rising while fewer and fewer students are attending Vermont schools, an unsustainable trend that has to be reversed, he said.
The 2.2 percent increase announced by Burr and Burton today is under the 2.5 percent figure targeted by the Scott administration.
“At the end of the day, I will not support any legislation that authorizes state spending to grow faster than the rate of growth in the economy and wages. We estimate the growth rate calculation – average state economic and wage growth over the past six years – to be 2.5% and expect confirmation from the state economist in early December,” Scott said. “ We need to establish the same boundaries for per pupil spending across the state. If we have the courage to innovate and the resolve to follow through, this standard does not have to result in cuts to programming for kids and, in fact, can increase academic opportunities.”