Casey-Westfield School Board Adopts Amended Budget, Locks in Fuel Prices
The Casey-Westfield CUSD C-4 Board of Education formally adopted its amended budget for the 2025 fiscal year following a brief public hearing where no comments were offered.
The hearing was opened at 7:00 p.m. by Board President Tracy Gelb. Superintendent Mike Shackelford provided a summary of the amended budget, after which the hearing was closed at 7:17 p.m. Later in the meeting, the board voted unanimously to officially adopt the budget.
In a related financial matter, the board approved a two-year fuel contract with Bolin Fuels for the period of fiscal year 2025 through 2027. The district received bids from both Bolin Fuels and Illini FS. Shackelford recommended Bolin’s proposal, noting that based on a 35,000-gallon agreement, its bid was five cents per gallon less expensive for gasoline. The prices for #2 Diesel from both suppliers were described as “virtually the same.”
The contract covers gasoline, diesel, and oil, securing stable pricing for a major operational expense for the next two school years. This approval was part of a large consent agenda that passed on a single unanimous vote.
Latest News Stories
Google says Biden admin ‘pressed’ it to censor some COVID-19 content
Judge’s questions during IL gun ban arguments gives rights advocates ‘hope’
Illinois agencies to post monthly investment reports, lawmaker calls symbolic
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker orders ‘efficiencies’ for state spending; Marshalls recover missing child
WATCH: AR15s protected by 2nd Amendment; advocate reacts to appeals court hearing
Fiscal Fallout: Illinois spending swells 43% under Pritzker
Lake Land College to Name Nursing Simulation Lab for HSHS St. Anthony’s After Major Gift
New Incentives and Homecoming Plans Underway at Casey-Westfield Schools
White House does not expect arrests of sanctuary mayors and governors
ICE puts California, Illinois, New York on notice for refusing to cooperate
Appeals judge questions ‘uphill battle’ for IL gun ban found unconstitutional
Illinois library staff to be trained with overdose antidotes under new law