Superintendent Munshi opened the Sept. 5 board meeting and called on district staff member Mister Mesa to present the district's opening enrollment report.
"This is actually today's enrollment ... as of noon when I pulled it, enrollment is 10,202," Mesa said, reporting a kindergarten enrollment of 572. He told trustees the district had budgeted for a 187-student decline but current counts showed only a 42-student drop from the prior year.
Mesa framed the local numbers in the context of long-term demographic trends, saying national birth rates have declined since 2009 and some Western states have seen larger drops. "Five years from now, we'll have even a smaller kinder class than even this year," he said, noting ZIP-code–level birth data published through 2022 are at a low point for the city.
The presenter warned enrollment trends will have budget consequences and emphasized average daily attendance (ADA). "Average daily attendance is perhaps even more important than enrollment," Mesa said, adding that a 1 percentage-point change in ADA for the district would be roughly $1,200,000.
Mesa also reviewed historical declines — for example, prior single-year drops of more than 300 students — and reminded the board that discussions of possible school closures are an annual agenda item each January. He said the district will monitor ADA and enrollment through the October certification snapshot used for funding projections.
Board members thanked Mesa for the presentation and described the figures as a positive development because the district's decline is not as steep as originally projected. The board did not take action on the enrollment report; it was presented for information.
The district will continue to track October certification and ADA to assess budget implications and whether further operational changes are necessary.