Toll of Commuting
News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

Possible $1.85 million cuts to Monroe schools spark concern about staffing and class sizes

A growing number of parents are speaking out ahead of the town’s referendum, which is still a couple of months away.

Mark Sudol

Mar 11, 2026, 6:19 AM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

Monroe parents are worried about possible $1.85 million in cuts, which could affect staffing, programs and class sizes across the district.

A growing number of parents are speaking out ahead of the town’s referendum, which is still a couple of months away. Superintendent Joe Kobza initially proposed a budget increase largely driven by fixed costs including salaries, health insurance, transportation and special education, as well as proposals to move eighth grade to the high school. Enrollment has been increasing, causing space constraints in district buildings, and the COVID money schools received is no longer available.

“We’re seeing things from the federal side, from the state side, but that doesn’t change our town’s obligation and our obligation as a community to provide for our children, so we can have those hard conversations but not at the expense of our children,” said Jason Maur with the Monroe Town Council.

Monroe First Selectman Terry Rooney sent this statement:

“The budget process in Monroe is still ongoing and will be until the people cast their vote at a referendum in May. State mandates on education and the lack of excess cost funding create a very large impact on budgets in all municipalities.”

The town is proposing a $76.7 million school budget. The final vote is May 5.

More Stories

More From News12

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices