On a Tuesday, just after five o’clock in the afternoon, the press release arrived. Since it was election day, the schools were closed. In Lexington, that timing was not overlooked. The tendency for bad news to arrive when the building is dark and the parking lots are quiet is something that people discuss. That day, Fayette County Public Schools eliminated 120 positions. When the list was released, it read more like a map of everything a contemporary school district secretly depends on than a budget memo. 49 hourly positions. seventy-one salaried. Depending on the release you read, there are anywhere from sixteen to seventeen administrators, which is a minor clue in and of itself.
This has its origins in 2008, which is shocking to say aloud. The district has admitted to making mistakes in financial reporting over the course of seven superintendents and almost twenty years; this is the kind of gradual issue that no one wants to be dealing with when the music stops. By spring, the calculations had solidified into an indisputable conclusion: FCPS required a short-term loan of up to $110 million simply to cover payroll in July. That’s not the kind of money you borrow to get through a difficult time. Because something structural broke a long time ago, you borrowed it.

When I go through the records, there is one admission that makes me uneasy. The obvious question was posed during a budget Q&A session: how much will it really save to eliminate all these jobs? According to the district, each affected person was informed on an individual basis, and human resources is collaborating with individuals who have tenure or job rights to find possible placements. Alright. However, the savings figure itself? Acting budget director Jessica Williams stated unequivocally that they lacked it. These cuts are the foundation of the entire $711 million proposed budget, but the exact amount they produce is still unknown. It’s difficult not to think that’s weird.
The roles that were eliminated have a narrative of their own. PBIS coaches for behavior. Ten liaisons for community and family engagement. multilingual family representatives. a manager of school energy. A laid-off employee told a local station that his department had prevented $31 million in utility costs and saved the district about $2 million annually. This raises the unsettling question of whether some of these positions were costs at all or subtly the opposite.
This has a shape that is familiar. For years, districts all over the nation have piled on central-office support personnel during prosperous times, only to scramble to remove them when the ledger falters. Fayette is not special. However, because so many of these positions involved the most vulnerable children—dropout prevention specialists, exceptional-child teachers, and those who assist immigrant families in navigating a new system—the human cost feels more acute here.
I think the district is serious when they say that none of this reflects on the individuals. Despite this, demonstrators arrived with signs urging reporters to defend themselves. FCPS is still dedicated to preserving classroom instruction, encouraging student success, and reestablishing financial stability. Perhaps. Whether a district that lost track of its own books for sixteen years can restore trust as fast as it eliminated jobs is still up in the air. You can tell that part will take a lot longer.
