Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 11.04.29 AM

Peotone School Board Rejects Budget Amid Financial Crisis, Scrambles for Cuts

Spread the love

207U School Regular Board Meeting September 22, 2025

Article Summary: The Peotone Board of Education rejected the district’s proposed 2025-2026 budget, which projected a $4.2 million deficit, forcing an emergency search for deep spending cuts. With the district having exhausted its borrowing capacity, the administration has been tasked with presenting three tiers of budget-cutting options before a new vote must be held by the state’s September 30 deadline.

Peotone CUSD 207U Budget Crisis Key Points:

  • Budget Rejected: The board voted 4-3 against adopting the Fiscal Year 2026 budget, which carried a projected $4.2 million deficit.

  • Financial Cliff: Administrators confirmed the district has run out of its capacity to borrow money, giving it approximately one year of financial solvency under the proposed spending plan.

  • Cuts Demanded: The board directed the administration to draft three budget-cutting proposals: an aggressive plan, a moderate plan, and one with minimal student impact, to be reviewed before a new vote.

  • Emergency Meeting: An emergency board meeting has been scheduled for the last week of September to pass a budget before the state’s September 30 deadline, after which the district would be legally unable to spend money.

PEOTONE, IL – The Peotone Board of Education on Monday, September 22, 2025, took the dramatic step of rejecting the district’s proposed 2025-2026 budget, signaling a full-blown financial crisis and triggering an urgent search for millions of dollars in spending cuts.

The budget, which projected a $4.2 million deficit, failed on a 4-3 vote during the regular board meeting. Board members who voted no—Tim Stoub, Ashley Stachniak, Jodi Becker, and Mark Jones II—pointed to the district’s dire financial state, which includes having completely exhausted its borrowing capacity.

The rejection forced a tense discussion in a committee meeting held immediately after, where the administration was directed to draft and present a series of drastic cutting options before an emergency meeting to pass a revised budget ahead of the state’s September 30 deadline.

“The fact that nothing changed in this proposed budget reflected where I voted today,” said Board Member Tim Stoub, explaining his opposition. He referenced a recent meeting where the district’s inability to borrow more money was fully revealed. “That changed a lot… Right now we’re dominoing over the edge.”

Business Manager Adrian Fulgencio and Superintendent Brandon Owens confirmed the severity of the situation. Under the proposed budget, the district has only one year of financial viability before its funds are depleted.

“4.2 million dollars is not something that we can just cut right here, right now, without it actually impacting students,” Fulgencio told the board.

In response, the board tasked the administration with finding ways to stretch the district’s finances for at least two years, providing a crucial window to plan for long-term solutions like school consolidation. “If you can start stretching from one year to two, that gets us into the range of consolidation,” Stoub said. “If we’re going to come to the community and ask for money to start building, ‘what have we done for them lately?’ is going to be the question. We spent money knowing that we ran out. That’s not going to land well.”

The administration is now preparing three proposals: an aggressive plan with major cuts that will significantly impact students; a moderate plan that could see cuts to extracurriculars in the range of $600,000 to $700,000; and a minimal-impact option, which administrators conceded would be difficult to achieve.

“I need the administration to recommend what our students today are going to feel the least and how can you make that number the highest,” Stoub said.

The crisis puts all district spending under a microscope, including capital projects like the proposed new baseball and softball fields, which were also discussed at the committee meeting. The path forward appears to hinge on a district-wide facility condition and feasibility study, which was presented by architectural firm Wight & Company. The study is intended to provide a roadmap for consolidating from five buildings to four or three, a move seen as essential for long-term financial stability.

The board must pass a budget by September 30 or it will be legally unable to spend money, which would halt payroll and vendor payments. An emergency meeting has been scheduled for Monday, September 29, to vote on a new, presumably leaner, budget.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois Quick Hits: Grants issued for apprenticeship programs

Illinois Quick Hits: Grants issued for apprenticeship programs

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity announced Monday that they awarded...
K-12 schools, higher ed institutions prevail in diversity litigation

K-12 schools, higher ed institutions prevail in diversity litigation

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Threats to federal funds at K-12 schools and institutions of higher education because of diversity policies have been squashed in a federal courtroom in Virginia....
Medical group debunks recent study on racial concordance, says patient outcomes not improved by philosophy

Medical group debunks recent study on racial concordance, says patient outcomes not improved by philosophy

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Medical group Do No Harm released a report Tuesday that it says debunks a study on racial concordance, with a Do No Harm leader stating...
Will County Board Graphic.01

County Approves $22 Million in Road Projects for Lorenzo Road and Mills Road

Will County Board Meeting | January 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board approved major infrastructure contracts, including an $18.8 million bridge replacement on Lorenzo Road and a $3.2...
Three Democrats seeking Illinois U.S. Senate seat debate in Chicago

Three Democrats seeking Illinois U.S. Senate seat debate in Chicago

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Immigration and taxation policies are front and center for Democratic Party candidates seeking to replace Illinois U.S....
Emissions permitted? ‘Irrelevant’ vs lawsuits: IL Sup Ct

Emissions permitted? ‘Irrelevant’ vs lawsuits: IL Sup Ct

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Businesses in Illinois hit by blizzards of potentially ruinous lawsuits over alleged harm caused by emissions from their factories or other facilities...
As snowfall tapers, 'deep freeze' sets in as another potential storm on the horizon

As snowfall tapers, ‘deep freeze’ sets in as another potential storm on the horizon

By Morgan Sweeney and Ava OttThe Center Square Winter Storm Fern has left hundreds of thousands without power and claimed a number of lives across the country, and the cold...
California legislators react to ICE's fatal shooting of citizen

California legislators react to ICE’s fatal shooting of citizen

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square In reaction to Saturday's fatal shooting of an American citizen in Minnesota by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, California lawmakers are introducing legislation designed...
Senate Judiciary to hear Minnesota fraud allegations

Senate Judiciary to hear Minnesota fraud allegations

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee will hear new accusations regarding the Minnesota fraud scandal investigation. The hearing, which was originally scheduled for Wednesday, will likely...
Trump: Minnesota fraud, riots linked

Trump: Minnesota fraud, riots linked

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square As protests continue in Minneapolis after the Saturday shooting death of a city resident by an immigration officer, the Trump administration is blaming local and...
WA leaders intensify opposition to federal immigration enforcement efforts

WA leaders intensify opposition to federal immigration enforcement efforts

By TJ MartinellThe Center Square Washington state elected officials are intensifying their opposition to federal immigration enforcement efforts following the shooting of a protester in Minnesota by Immigration and Customs...

WATCH: Trump, Walz speak; White House puts demands on Minnesota leaders

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square As tensions continue to rise in Minneapolis and immigration officials ratchet up enforcement, President Donald Trump announced a potential breakthrough in a stalemate between Trump...
Police group urges White House to convene law enforcement officials to work together

Police group urges White House to convene law enforcement officials to work together

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Following a second fatal shooting in Minneapolis involving immigration officials, a prominent law enforcement organization is urging the White House to bring together local, state...
Illinois quick hits: Report: Paroled six-time felon charged in shootings

Illinois quick hits: Report: Paroled six-time felon charged in shootings

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Report: Paroled six-time felon charged in shootings Prosecutors have charged a paroled six-time felon with shooting a woman inside a Chicago...
Systematic organization behind riots in Minnesota probed by FBI

Systematic organization behind riots in Minnesota probed by FBI

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A systematic organization behind riots in Minnesota exposed through leaked group chats is under investigation, says FBI Director Kash Patel. Patel said the FBI is...