
San Antonio Independent School District is staring at a roughly $46 million budget hole, and a major round of staff cuts is now on the table. District leaders told trustees they are weighing reductions that would fall mostly on the central office while trimming some campus positions, a move they argue is necessary to keep next year’s budget in the black. The plan is set for more debate before a board vote that could reshape services in neighborhoods where many families count on the district for far more than classroom instruction.
District staff outlined proposals that would wipe out roughly 220–224 full-time positions, including about 115 central administrative jobs and around 51 teaching roles, and would likely save more than $19 million while still leaving a sizable gap, according to the San Antonio Express-News. The paper reported that SAISD employs roughly 7,400 staff members, and officials told trustees they are tracking enrollment scenarios that could range from about 42,000 students to fewer than 38,600. Administrators also flagged that more than 1,300 people living inside SAISD boundaries have applied for the state's new voucher program. Superintendent Jaime Aquino called the proposed cuts “painful” and “heartbreaking” as officials weigh how many positions can be shed through attrition and how many could require active layoffs.
Why enrollment shortfalls matter
SAISD leaders have repeatedly pointed to years of declining enrollment, an aging set of campuses, and a state funding model that ties dollars to average daily attendance as the chief drivers of the budget gap. The district has been pursuing what it calls a “rightsizing” strategy, consolidating campuses and shifting programs in an effort to stretch limited dollars while preserving core services and supports. In recent weeks, SAISD has been briefing staff and the public about budget options and potential tradeoffs, according to San Antonio ISD.
Local officials warn of community effects
Trustee Jacob Ramos cautioned that the cuts could scale back neighborhood services such as food drives and family supports that the district now provides, noting that these extras have quietly become part of SAISD’s basic operating reality. Board Vice President Christina Martinez said those responsibilities have only grown in recent years as families lean on schools for help beyond academics. SAISD Police Chief Johnny Reyes told trustees that the police department has offered to leave some vacancies unfilled and that the reductions would not change “our current practice” of campus safety, according to the San Antonio Express-News. Community leaders and parents are expected to press their case as the board moves toward a formal vote.
State policy and the voucher question
Complicating the district’s math is the statewide rollout of the new education savings account program, which could pull students and funding away and make enrollment forecasts even less predictable. Early reporting and analysis indicate that many early applicants to Texas' voucher program did not previously attend public school, which makes it harder for districts to guess how many current students might follow, according to the Texas Tribune. SAISD officials say they are meeting with city and county partners to explore how neighborhood supports might be sustained if district-level cuts move forward.
What to watch next
The board plans to continue budget briefings ahead of a formal vote, with the next budget meeting scheduled for April 13, and trustees could revise staffing plans as enrollment and voucher data become clearer. Administrators say some reductions would come from leaving vacancies open rather than immediately laying people off, though they acknowledge that community services could still feel the impact. Public hearings and board workshops in the coming weeks will give families and staff an early shot at pushing for alternatives or tweaks before anything is finalized.









