Vancouver Public Schools is bracing for a major staffing shake-up after the school board signed off on a reduction-in-force plan Tuesday that will wipe out roughly 189 positions and slice about $24 million from the district’s 2026–27 operating budget. The cuts reach into classroom specialists, school-based support staff, custodial and maintenance crews, and central-office roles, and are set to kick in next school year. District leaders say years of shrinking enrollment, rising costs and a nearly drained fund balance left them with few palatable options.
Local coverage of the March 10 board meeting reported that district officials laid out a projected shortfall initially estimated at more than $27 million before the board settled on a plan closer to $24 million. Media reports pegged the job losses at just under 200 positions. According to KGW, educators and families urged the board to shield classroom services as much as possible during the debate.
What the cuts include
The board’s formal order details full-time-equivalent reductions that total roughly 189 FTE. That includes about 126.3 FTE at school sites, among them 23 elementary and 12.4 secondary teacher FTEs, 43.9 teachers on special assignment, and 24 secretaries and paraprofessionals. Another 40.6 FTE are district-shared classified positions, such as custodial and technology support, and 22.2 FTE hit central-office posts. All of those line items appear in Resolution No. 941, which the board adopted March 10.
Why the district says it’s necessary
VPS serves roughly 20,000 students across 39 schools and programs and employs about 2,900 staff, a scale that magnifies budget pain when enrollment trends dip and costs climb. Officials cite a steady enrollment decline, inflation-driven increases in salaries and benefits, sharply rising special-education expenses, and a fund balance that has been spent down to plug earlier gaps. Put together, the district argues, those pressures leave little discretionary money left to close the latest hole.
District budget materials show that teaching accounts for more than half of total spending, with benefits and classified salaries making up much of what remains. In other words, by the time central-office trims are done, the only place left to find big savings is in people. For background and charts, see Vancouver Public Schools’ human resources and district budget pages.
Community response and next steps
At the March 10 meeting, educators and parents pressed board members to look for alternatives that would spare direct classroom services, even as administrators signaled that staff notices were on the way. Interim Superintendent Brett Blechschmidt told KPTV, “These reductions are much more painful than we would like,” and emphasized that the district will follow collective-bargaining rules and timelines as the reduction-in-force rolls out…