British Columbia

Kamloops, B.C., school district could cut nearly 80 positions

The Kamloops, B.C., school district may cut nearly 80 staff positions as it faces a $5.79-million budget shortfall for the 2025-26 year, according to preliminary figures.

Superintendent cites inflationary pressures, says cuts will focus on non-student-facing roles

An office building that says 'Welcome School District 73 Kamloops/Thompson Board Office.'
School District 73 is contemplating cutting 79 full-time-equivalent staff members to make up for a hefty budget shortfall. (Google Maps)

The Kamloops, B.C., school district may cut nearly 80 staff positions as it faces a $5.79-million budget shortfall for the 2025-26 school year, according to preliminary figures.

School District 73 covers the city of Kamloops and nearby rural municipalities in the Thompson area of the south-central Interior, and has an enrolment of around 16,600 students, according to its website.

The school district's preliminary budget, presented last week, shows that 79 full-time-equivalent positions could be eliminated, with the district's superintendent attributing the budget shortfall to flattening enrolment and inflationary pressures.

While the budget won't be finalized until a board meeting on April 28, superintendent Rhonda Nixon said the cuts will primarily affect staff that don't directly interact with students.

LISTEN | School district faces millions in shortfall: 
The Kamloops-Thompson school district is staring down the possibility of cutting nearly 80 full-time-equivalent positions amid a budget shortfall in 2025-26. Superintendent Rhonda Nixon and school board chair Heather Grieve said the decisions they have to make are hard.

"The reductions are reductions we don't want to make, but at least we're ... trying to save as many positions as we can," she told Shelley Joyce, host of CBC's Daybeak Kamloops.

Nixon said teachers and education assistants wouldn't be affected by the staff reductions, but counsellors and learning assistance resource teachers would be.

A woman wearing a navy blue coat smiles for a headshot.
Rhonda Nixon, superintendent of School Board 73, says the decision to cut staff wasn't taken lightly. (School District 73)

There would also be custodial support staff who would be affected, and vacancies for a district principal and some administrative positions would not be filled.

"We retained as much as we could in literacy and numeracy to ensure supports continue," Nixon said. "And then as far as exempt staff, there were positions already reduced this year, and those will continue."

Enrolment partially to blame

Nixon said the budget shortfall was entirely separate from a $2.2-million deficit the board announced last year that was due to an accounting error.

She said that inflationary pressures, and the rising cost of benefits and salaries, were to blame for the shortfall this year.

"What is making it difficult is that our per-student funding does not include those costs," she said. "So we have cost increases that go beyond the funding we received."

In addition, Nixon said the district had been relying on steady enrolment increases, of about 250 students a year, for the last five years. But now, enrolment figures are flat or decreasing.

The superintendent chalked that up to a number of factors — including declining birth rates, interprovincial migration, and immigration cutbacks that mean post-secondary students who are parents can't stay.

Parent blames provincial gov't

Meanwhile, the president of the Kamloops district parent advisory council blames stagnant funding from the province for the shortfall.

"Every single school district is in the same position, in that the ministry has not continued to provide enough money per student in a consistent way across the last 10 years or more," said Bonnie McBride. "And it's starting to catch up with all of them."

McBride said the situation was "quite frankly unacceptable," and said reducing access to public education in B.C. was creating a two-tiered system by pushing parents to pay for private schools.

LISTEN | McBride says province hasn't been funding schools: 
With a $5.79 million gap projected, parents and students in the Kamloops-Thompson School District are bracing for possible cuts. We hear from Bonnie McBride, the president of the district parent advisory council.

A spokesperson for the Education Ministry said it had been steadily increasing per-student funding since 2017, and it had provided over $220 million in operating and special grants for School District 73 in the 2024-25 school year.

"Funding and planning are largely driven by student enrolment, and population trends are beginning to change. This year's enrolment growth is lower than last year," the spokesperson said.

The ministry spokesperson added that the government would continue to work with districts to ensure funding was utilized as effectively as possible.

The legs of children underneath school desks
The president of the Kamloops district parent advisory council has blamed the province for not funding schools appropriately. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Akshay Kulkarni

Journalist

Akshay Kulkarni is an award-winning journalist who has worked at CBC British Columbia since 2021. Based in Vancouver, he is most interested in data-driven stories. You can email him at akshay.kulkarni@cbc.ca.

With files from Shelley Joyce, Jessica Wallace and Daybreak Kamloops