Beecher Board Clears FY27 Spending, Fee Schedule, Special-Ed Pact
Beecher 200-U Board of Education Meeting | June 10, 2026
Article Summary: The Beecher 200-U board approved a slate of routine year-end governance items, including authorization to begin spending in fiscal 2027 before the budget is adopted, a new fee schedule with only modest increases, and an intergovernmental agreement extending special-education services to students beyond the district’s primary cooperative.
Year-End Governance Key Points:
- The board authorized FY27 expenditures for operations, transportation, maintenance and construction until the annual budget is adopted, per the Illinois School Code.
- A special-education intergovernmental agreement with the Kankakee Area Special Education Cooperative (KASEC) will provide occupational-therapy services for students living south of the district’s existing cooperative’s reach.
- The 2027 fee schedule carries no lunch-price increase and a $5 student-insurance increase; the board also adopted its consolidated district plan and FY27 meeting calendar.
BEECHER — The Beecher Community Unit School District 200-U Board of Education on Wednesday, June 10, 2026, worked through a series of fiscal and governance approvals as it closed out the school year.
The board authorized the district to spend in fiscal year 2027 to cover necessary expenses for educational, operations, maintenance, transportation, site and construction purposes until the annual budget is formally adopted, a routine June action that lets the district order goods and pay bills before the budget is finalized later in the summer. Superintendent Jack Gaham described it as a yearly authorization that “allows the school district” to begin spending with the board’s trust ahead of budget adoption.
Members also approved an intergovernmental agreement with the Kankakee Area Special Education Cooperative, or KASEC. Gaham explained that the district’s primary cooperative reaches only so far geographically, and that some students live south of that boundary; the KASEC agreement allows Beecher to use that cooperative’s occupational-therapy provider for those students.
On the fee schedule for the 2026-27 year, Gaham said lunch prices were not being raised — a corrected figure from the prior year had simply been recalculated — and that the district remained within state parameters that allowed it to hold meal prices steady. The only increases members flagged were a $5 bump in student insurance and an adjustment tied to technology. “I don’t want to get back in the issue where we were before, where we don’t raise fees forever and ever and ever and then we’ve just got to jump them up so high,” one member said in support of small, steady adjustments.
The board additionally adopted its consolidated district plan — an annual filing with the Illinois State Board of Education covering Title programs and district goals that unlocks federal grant funding once approved — and approved its FY27 meeting calendar. The calendar shifts the July meeting from July 8 to July 15 and moves the November meeting back a week because Veterans Day falls on Nov. 11.
The board’s earlier closed session included collective-bargaining matters, and members noted a negotiation meeting is expected before the July board meeting. One member said the board might “be lucky” and have a contract by then but called that unlikely.
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