Salem, OR: Enrollment down, district adds behavior specialists/SPED teachers
- The end of childhood
- May 9
- 4 min read
May 6, 2025, Salem (OR) Reporter: Schools would get more help with student behavior under Salem-Keizer budget proposal
The Salem-Keizer School District will add 66 employees next school year despite declining enrollment and escalating costs, a change Superintendent Andrea Castañeda said is needed to create “a safe and supportive learning environment” by adding educators in special education and to help with challenging student behavior.
Castañeda presented her $1.15 billion budget proposal Tuesday evening to the school district’s budget committee, sounding a familiar warning that even with proposed funding increases, state money for schools is not keeping up with rising employee and pension costs or with the myriad social services schools are expected to provide.
Other large districts in Oregon are facing budget cuts and employee layoffs this year. Castañeda last year led the district through $70 million in cuts that included eliminating about 300 jobs and laying off about 100 people.
Her proposed budget adds some positions intended to deal with cuts that went too deep, in addition to significantly expanding behavior support. Eighty percent of new employees will work directly in schools.. . .
The budget projects that local schools will enroll 37,189 students next year, a decline of about 700 from this year. Student enrollment has been falling since the Covid pandemic.
Castañeda said it’s worth spending more now on help for students struggling with behavior despite forthcoming budget challenges, calling the new positions “long overdue.” The district will spend $53 million total on such help next year.
“We believe that that is the most important working condition for our students, for their families and for our staff right now,” she told Salem Reporter. “I don’t believe we will be able to sustain this level of behavioral health staffing … But behavior is the dominant emergency in our buildings right now. We cannot look away. We must keep investing, and we will get a handle on it, and that will allow us to reset in ways that are appropriate later on.”
Castañeda’s budget doesn’t provide a breakdown of the job descriptions for new added positions, but she detailed some additions.
Here’s an overview of what the budget proposal would do.
Special education and more behavior support
Many of the added positions reflect two new programs the school district is starting next year.
The first is a significant expansion of its existing Behavioral Intervention Center, an intensive program for students of any age with significant behavioral issues.
That program will move from two smaller school buildings to one campus in a wing at Straub Middle School in West Salem. The expansion will more than double the space available to 45 students, requiring several additional teachers and classroom assistants.
Castañeda is also proposing to add 10 behavior interventionists who will work directly in schools with struggling students.
Twelve employees will be hired as part of a new partnership with Western Oregon University to increase the number of licensed special education teachers.
Participants have already applied for the program, which allows them to work as special education assistants in the district while studying to become licensed teachers at WOU. The goal is to ease recruiting for special education jobs, which are particularly difficult to fill. . . .
Castañeda said challenging student behavior in schools requires clinical help and said the vast majority of behavioral issues in schools are not disciplinary in nature.
“They are children, often young children, who are dysregulated and they do not understand the scope of their behavior, in some cases the extremity, and almost always the implications,” she said. “A school resource officer is never going to be the person who provides the therapeutic support necessary for a child to recover from trauma.” . . .
Rising school costs
The superintendent’s proposal means the school district would spend about $46 million more than it brings in next year. The district has enough savings to cover the gap, and Castañeda expects vacant jobs and other savings will reduce the size. But she cautioned the current trend remains unsustainable.
Most of the increase is due to the cost of keeping current employees, not the new ones Castañeda is proposing to hire. The district will spend about $20 million more next year on pension costs for already retired employees, for example — money that doesn’t add any services to schools or benefits for current employees.
The gap exists despite a proposal from Gov. Tina Kotek to increase school funding to a level that was intended to keep pace with rising district costs, Castañeda said. She said the district’s cost for employees will rise 9% next year at minimum — and the final figure depends on the cost of the contract district leaders are currently negotiating with the Salem-Keizer Education Association.
The budget comes amid significant uncertainty over the future of federal funding for schools, particularly in Oregon, which has pushed back on efforts by the Trump administration to curb diversity, equity and inclusion programs in schools. Salem-Keizer receives about $80 million per year from the federal government. . . .

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