Difficult budget year for Central Florida schools |
Central Florida school districts are preparing for a difficult 2026-27 budget year as declining enrollment, rising costs, and modest state funding increases force spending cuts, staff reductions, and the use of reserve funds. School leaders in Orange, Seminole, Lake, and Osceola counties say a 1% increase in per-student funding falls short of inflation and does not cover growing expenses, particularly for health care. Seminole County eliminated 242 instructional and support positions to reduce a $30m deficit, while Orange County cut department budgets by 5%, closed seven under-enrolled schools, and continues to face a projected $145m deficit driven largely by rising health care costs. Osceola is managing a $7m shortfall after drawing heavily on its reserves, while Lake County has reduced spending and merged two middle schools to stay financially stable. District officials attribute enrollment declines to lower birth rates, reduced immigration, and the rapid expansion of Florida's universal school voucher program, which has shifted funding away from traditional public schools.