Chicago school officials to dip into reserves to fund budget
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Chicago Public Schools leaders won't ask homeowners to pay more in property taxes this year and instead will raid the district's reserves by $100 million, cut hundreds of non-classroom jobs and streamline bus routes in a move that could mean new start times at up to 72 schools.<br /><br />The $5.1 billion budget unveiled Wednesday increases spending by 4.3 percent from last year, most of the boost going to cover a 4 percent teacher pay hike that's part of a five-year contract. Schools chief Arne Duncan and Mayor Richard Daley wanted to spend an additional $97 million, but shelved that plan after failing to pry the money out of Springfield and facing a political climate in which City Hall raised property taxes last year and sales tax increases for Cook County and the CTA took effect this year.<br /><br />"The economy is hitting everybody hard . . . today we know people are hurting and they are having a hard time trying to make ends meet and we refuse to add to that burden," Duncan said. "This year they simply need a break."<br /><br />The scaled-back budget includes nearly $40 million to expand programs. The High School Transformation initiative designed to strengthen instruction will get $16 million more, a program to turn around underperforming schools will receive an additional $7 million and another to help incoming freshman adjust to high school will see a $6.6 million boost.