Metro Denver districts face years of financial pressure despite budget cuts |
School districts across the Denver metropolitan area are eliminating jobs, closing schools, and drawing on reserve funds as declining enrollment, rising operating costs, and constrained state funding create growing budget deficits. Cherry Creek Schools, Jeffco Public Schools, and Adams 12 Five Star Schools have collectively cut hundreds of positions, while the Douglas County School District is closing three elementary schools and plans further reductions in coming years. Cherry Creek eliminated 159 positions, reducing costs by about $23m, while Jeffco cut 139 positions and expects to use $13m in reserves to balance its nearly $1bn budget. Douglas County will operate with a $22m deficit next year as it continues to fund employee pay increases, but officials warn reserve funds are nearing exhaustion. District leaders said the financial strain stems primarily from falling student enrollment, which reduces state funding, alongside higher costs for items such as health insurance, fuel, and employee compensation. Denver Public Schools, Colorado’s largest district, balanced its budget for next year without using reserves, but projects a cumulative $28m deficit between fiscal years 2027-28 and 2030-31.