Key Points
- Oxford Hills officials have proposed a 2026-27 school budget that keeps overall spending flat, with no increase from the current year.
- The budget would eliminate 6.5 positions, including two open teacher posts and one special education role, with hopes that some reductions can be handled through attrition.
- Transportation for non-league athletics would be cut, meaning buses would not be provided for non-conference competitions or some freshman team travel.
- Officials say gear, uniforms, and equipment remain funded for now, but a future “pay-to-play” model may need to be considered.
- A public hearing is scheduled for 20 May, with the budget referendum set for 9 June.
How is Oxford Hills proposing a flat 2026-27 budget while cutting sports transport?
Oxford(Oxford Daily)May 06, 2026 – Oxford Hills school leaders have put forward a 2026-27 budget that does not raise overall spending, even as it trims staffing and reduces support for some athletics travel.
As reported by Heather Manchester, superintendent of Maine School Administrative District 17, the board’s aim has been to keep the budget flat, and district officials say they have worked to meet that goal. The proposal follows a 2025-26 budget of $54.4 million approved by voters last year, which itself was 7.9% higher than the previous year.
What does the proposal cut?
The most visible operational change in the plan is the reduction of transportation for non-league athletics. That means buses would no longer be provided for competitions against nonconference teams, including preseason games, and some freshman teams would also lose bus transport.
Which jobs are affected?
The budget eliminates 6.5 positions in total. Two of those are open teacher positions, and one is a special education role. Manchester has said the district hopes the other three and a half positions can be absorbed through attrition rather than through layoffs.
This staffing move shows how the district is trying to balance a flat budget without broad service expansion. It also suggests that the district is prioritising the preservation of the overall budget line over adding personnel.
Why is the district holding spending flat?
District leaders have said the school board directed staff to keep the budget flat. That approach comes after a difficult funding environment in which last year’s increase was partly driven by a reduction of more than $1 million in state subsidy, linked to Maine Department of Education calculations about rising property valuations in the district.
The current plan also contains a significant reduction in the facilities maintenance budget, which has been a target for cuts for years. Officials say the savings will come from using a performance-contract model to replace windows in school buildings rather than buying and installing them directly, with the projected savings over 10 years covering an overall expense of $850,000.
What happens next in the budget process?
The district plans to present the final proposal to voters at a public hearing on 20 May at Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School’s Forum in South Paris. The budget referendum is then scheduled for 9 June, the same day as the state primary elections.
That means residents will soon have to decide whether to support a budget that keeps spending levels but relies on staffing reductions, reduced athletics transport, and long-term maintenance savings. The debate is likely to focus on whether those trade-offs are acceptable to protect the district’s overall financial position.
What is the background to this development?
Oxford Hills has already faced budget strain in recent years, including last year’s increase that followed a more than $1 million state subsidy cut. That earlier hit was tied to the state’s view that property values in the district had grown significantly.
The district also recently faced voter resistance on capital spending, with residents declining $3.8 million in renovations for a new bus garage earlier in 2026. Taken together, those events suggest a community that is closely scrutinising school spending and willing to push back when costs rise.
What is the prediction for athletes and families?
If the proposal is approved as written, students in nonconference sports and some freshman teams are likely to feel the earliest effects through longer travel burdens and added logistical strain. Families may also face future cost pressure if the district eventually adopts a pay-to-play system.
For the wider audience of taxpayers and voters, the budget could be seen as a compromise: it avoids a headline spending increase, but does so by trimming services and shifting some costs down the line. That may make the proposal easier to defend financially, but harder to sell to households that value full athletics support and staffing stability.
