D122 to Spend $24,950 on Professional Enrollment Forecast
New Lenox School District 122 will hire an outside firm to conduct a comprehensive, 10-year enrollment forecast at an estimated cost of $24,950. The Board of Education approved an agreement with Flo Analytics to provide the detailed demographic study, which will guide strategic planning for the next several years.
According to district administration, student enrollment is the most critical factor in long-range planning, directly influencing staffing, which accounts for over 80% of the district’s budget, as well as decisions on building capacity, program design, and attendance boundaries.
In a memo to the board, Business Manager Robert Groos stated that while the district’s internal forecasting methods have been consistently accurate over the past decade, a professional forecast is recommended every three to four years due to the potential for significant future growth in and around New Lenox. The district’s last professional enrollment study was completed in June 2022.
Flo Analytics will work with village planners, analyze census data, and pull information from various sources to develop the forecast. The study will project enrollment annually from the 2026-27 school year through 2035-36.
The results will provide district-wide forecasts by grade level and school, helping to ensure that future planning is not “derailed by any type of enrollment surprise.” The board approved the contract as part of its consent agenda.
Latest News Stories
Lincoln-Way West Offense Roars in 12-0 Shutout Over Lincoln-Way Central
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education for April 29, 2026
Canadian border crimes: Multi-million grandparent, crypto scam; human smuggling
Access Will County Dial-A-Ride Reports Massive Growth After Consolidating Paratransit Services
Trade, Taiwan top priorities for Trump, Xi as two leaders wrap first meeting
Critics question unions after $1B in political spending
Trade court to rule on tariff stay by next week
Johnson defends Trump ballroom as ‘a donation to the country’
Vance cuts $1.3 billion in California Medicaid, pauses hospice care
Groups urge House leaders to reject E15 expansion, calling it a hidden tax
Lincoln-Way West Edges Bradley-Bourbonnais in 5-4 Conference Thriller
Illinois Quick Hits: Home insurance regulations approved by Illinois Senate