PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Public school enrollment in El Dorado County has held at roughly 32,000 students in recent years even as California’s long-running slide in K–12 enrollment shows signs of slowing, state and local records show. County totals and district rolls — and their downstream effect on budgets, staffing and programs — are shaping planning for the next several school years.
What the numbers show
State education officials reported a modest 0.54 percent drop in statewide public school enrollment in 2024–25 compared with the previous year, a slowing of earlier losses, while transitional kindergarten (TK) continued to expand. State Superintendent Tony Thurmond said the slowing decline and TK growth are an encouraging sign that targeted programs can help reengage families.
Locally, district-level totals vary: El Dorado Union High School District enrolls roughly 6,400 students, Lake Tahoe Unified about 3,500, Buckeye Union Elementary about 4,200, and Placerville Union Elementary about 1,200 — patterns that reflect both historic population differences across the county and recent grade-by-grade shifts.
Timeline and causes
Experts point to several overlapping causes: falling birth rates in California over the last decade, pandemic-era moves and remote-work migration, and increased uptake of alternative schooling (independent study, charter and private options) in some areas. Analysts at the Public Policy Institute of California say the state has lost roughly 6 percent of public school enrollment since 2013 and face demographic projections that could mean steeper declines over the next decade in many regions.
Local impact: budgets, staffing and programs
Smaller cohorts translate quickly into fiscal strain because state funding follows students. Districts that lose students can see meaningful reductions in revenue for classroom programs, electives and support services — a reality felt in the mountain and lake communities. In South Lake Tahoe, district leaders told the Tahoe Daily Tribune that shrinking enrollment and the end of certain COVID-era funds contributed to layoffs and a tighter budget forecast for 2024–25.
“We really believe strongly, we’re in a good place,”
Lake Tahoe Unified Superintendent Dr. Todd Cutler said at a State of the District address; at the same meeting officials also acknowledged the district had to lay off staff and that “next year is where things take a little dip,” Interim Chief Business Officer Kelly Buttery said.
County officials say the El Dorado County Office of Education is actively supporting districts with data services, multi-year budget planning and early-learning outreach to stabilize enrollments and attendance. The county office’s student data and accountability teams provide the longitudinal reports districts use to model scenarios and to qualify for targeted programs.
What districts are doing (and what works)
Local strategies mirror statewide efforts: aggressive TK and early-learning outreach, promotion of in-district programs that families want (dual-language immersion, expanded learning and career-tech offerings), targeted kindergarten recruitment and regional cooperation on shared back-office services to lower per-pupil costs. State leaders argue that expanding high-demand programs — TK and community schools among them — can help stabilize or reverse declines if districts are able to match services to family priorities.
Voices from the community
“We’ve seen pockets of growth at the youngest grades where strong TK programs exist, and declines elsewhere,”
said a county official who asked to be quoted only in their official capacity about enrollment modeling.
“The challenge is turning those early positive contacts into sustained K-12 retention.”
(Local district leaders echoed the need for family engagement programs and longer-range financial planning.) edcoe.org
Looking ahead
For the near term, county and district officials say they are planning with cautious optimism: plugging TK seats, bolstering kindergarten outreach, and running conservative, multi-year budget scenarios to protect classroom positions where possible. The longer horizon — shaped by fertility trends, housing affordability and migration patterns — remains the larger unknown and the principal driver of strategic choices about facilities and program investments.