MORRISVILLE, Bucks County (Nov. 4, 2025) — The Morrisville School District is warning that it may have to suspend all operations — including in-person classes, virtual instruction, athletics, transportation, and food services — on January 30, 2026, unless Pennsylvania’s ongoing state budget impasse is resolved.
Budget Stalemate Threatens School Operations
Superintendent Andrew Doster said the district is reaching a financial breaking point as the state budget remains unfinished. Morrisville depends on state funding for more than half of its annual operating budget, and with no new appropriations coming in, the district has been forced to operate on dwindling reserves.
Doster explained that without state funding, Morrisville will be unable to meet payroll, pay vendors, or maintain basic district operations after January 30. That date marks when the district expects to run out of available funds.
What Suspension Would Mean
If the district halts operations, all school activities would stop.
- No in-person or virtual classes
- No student transportation
- No meals or food service programs
- No athletics or extracurricular activities
- No support or administrative services
District leaders emphasized that this would not be a strike or a short-term delay—it would be a complete shutdown of all functions until state funding resumes.
Small District, Big Impact
Morrisville serves about 900 students across its three schools, with over 90 percent of students coming from economically disadvantaged families. That makes the district especially vulnerable to funding disruptions. Larger districts can often rely on cash reserves or temporary borrowing; smaller districts like Morrisville cannot.
“The reality is we are a small, working-class community that depends heavily on state aid,” Doster said. “We have stretched every dollar we can, but we’re approaching a point where it simply won’t be possible to keep operating.”
Part of a Larger Statewide Crisis
The Pennsylvania budget deadline passed on June 30, and as of early November, the impasse had dragged on for more than four months. School districts statewide have collectively missed out on billions of dollars in funding while lawmakers remain deadlocked.
Other districts, including some in Delaware County, have also warned they may run out of funds early next year if the budget remains unresolved. But Morrisville appears to be among the first to publicly set a shutdown date.
What Happens Next
The Morrisville School Board is expected to meet November 19 to discuss potential contingency measures. Options may include temporary borrowing or seeking emergency assistance, though officials admit these are limited.
Superintendent Doster is urging families and residents to contact their state legislators and press for swift action to pass the budget. “No one in our community wants this outcome,” he said. “We want to keep schools open. But without the state doing its part, we’re running out of time.”
Community Impact
A full shutdown would affect nearly every family in the borough. Parents would be left without childcare or meal programs, and staff could face furloughs or missed paychecks. Extracurricular programs, athletic seasons, and community partnerships would all come to a halt.
Bottom Line:
If Pennsylvania’s budget impasse continues, Morrisville School District says it will suspend all operations on January 30, a move that would disrupt hundreds of families and highlight the growing financial strain smaller districts face under the prolonged state budget stalemate.
