Skip to content
  • logo
  • logo
  • News
    • Elections
  • Schools
  • Police/Fire
  • Business
    • Real Estate
    • Development
  • Sports
  • Arts/Ent.
    • Food
  • More
    • Around Town
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
    • Boston Marathon Bombing
    • Environment
    • Transportation
    • Charity
    • Weather
    • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe

Watertown News - Your Source for Local News

Watertown News (https://www.watertownmanews.com/tag/fiscal-year-2023-budget/)

  • News
    • Elections
  • Schools
  • Police/Fire
  • Business
    • Real Estate
    • Development
  • Sports
  • Arts/Ent.
    • Food
  • More
    • Around Town
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
    • Boston Marathon Bombing
    • Environment
    • Transportation
    • Charity
    • Weather
    • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Subscribe

Fiscal Year 2023 Budget

Fiscal Year 2023 Budget

FY23 Watertown School Budget Adds Funds for Several Positions

By Charlie Breitrose | April 12, 2022

The Watertown Public Schools budget for Fiscal Year 2023 will include a 3.5 percent increase, and planned additions for the 2022-23 school year include funding for equity coordinators, drama and music teachers, assistant principals and a family engagement and communication specialist. The total budget will be $55.63 million, which is a $1.88 million increase from the previous fiscal year, said Superintendent Dede Galdston, who presented her recommended budget to the School Committee Monday night at the meeting held at Cunniff Elementary School. Most of the increase, about 80 percent, will go to providing a level-service budget, Galdston said, which is maintaining the programs and services provided during the current school year. The remaining funds, $370,835, will mostly be spent on new staff and positions. No budget area has increase significantly, Galdston said, but the Administration and Curriculum budget appears to be much higher than FY22 (46.8 percent more).

Support Watertown News

Newsletter

Watertown News

Recent Posts

  • Inside the City’s 311 Service Center, Where Staff Fields the Public’s Questions, Requests & More

    311 Service Center staff — Constituant Service Director Laura Murray (right) and Constituent Services Representative Stephanie Owens — outside their office City Hall. (Photo by Charlie Breitrose) Inside a small office in the back corner of City Hall sits the heart of Watertown's 311 Service Center.

  • Lawmakers Discuss Changes to Health Care System, Including State Rep. John Lawn

    State Representative John Lawn spoke on a panel about primary care reform at the 2026 Health Equity Trends Summit at UMass Boston on June 2. (Photo credit: Piper Brown Photography) Watertown State Rep. John Lawn joined a panel of lawmakers speaking about trends in health care in a time when federal policies are changing the system.

  • Watertown Community Foundation Challenge to Raise $25,000; Gifts Doubled Until June 26

    The following announcement was provided by the Watertown Community Foundation: The Watertown Community Foundation has launched a matching gift campaign to raise $25,000 in community donations and unlock up to $25,000 in matching funds. Through June 26, 2026, all gifts to support the work of the Watertown Community Foundation will be matched dollar for dollar — thanks to WCF’s Board of Directors.

  • LETTER: In Support of a Compromise Rent Control Bill

    By Tony PalombaCity Councilor At-Large As an At-Large City Councilor in Watertown Massachusetts I am acutely aware of the housing storage that Massachusetts is facing – both for those who wish to purchase a home and who would like to rent. We also know that the cost of homeownership and renting is continuing to climb.

  • LETTER: Hope is Not a Strategy — Pleasant Street and Beyond

    (Updated June 16, 2026 at 2:24 p.m.) By Linda ScottWatertown Resident I want to mention three meetings, one that I attended on June 5th that City Council President Mark Sideris conducted. These meetings are a relatively new concept as a result of our last Charter review.

Recent Comments

  • “Massachusetts voters in 1994 banned rent control for a simple reason: it doesn’t work. Study after study, including research from…”

    — Frank Clair on LETTER: In Support of a Compromise Rent Control Bill

  • “What about third shift or night workers? I think, as a night shift worker, that 12 am -6 am is…”

    — christopher shepard on City Council to Consider Changes to Noise Ordinance, Including New Allowed Hours for Lawn Work

  • “In your statement of purpose which I applaud the language of, you state " substantial body of science and technology…”

    — David Aitcheson on City Council to Consider Changes to Noise Ordinance, Including New Allowed Hours for Lawn Work

  • “I would agree that the collection of trash in a timely matter to prevent smell, contaminated stormwater, rats and maggots…”

    — Rita Colafella, living in Noah Kahan's Watertown on City Council to Consider Changes to Noise Ordinance, Including New Allowed Hours for Lawn Work

  • “The battery powered leaf blowers are not so bad. But the gasoline ones with the two-stroke engines run very dirty…”

    — Joe Levendusky on City Council to Consider Changes to Noise Ordinance, Including New Allowed Hours for Lawn Work

Newsletter

© Copyright 2026, Watertown News

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

Back to top ↑