Hannibal’s Prioritized Cuts Include Sports, Music, Art
They discovered that their list of possible cuts — all of which they said would harm education — would save more than the amount needed to fill the more than $600,000 gap between income and expenses for next school year.
That’s the good news.
The bad news is that the priority list would eliminate every extracurricular activity at Hannibal, badly damage co-curricular activities like band and chorus, and take another slice from academics.


Students from six economics classes take part in a bake sale at the high school during Thursday’s open house to get a taste of real world job experiences. The project was augmented by ‘consultants’ from the Oswego business community who volunteered their time to help guide the OHS Inc. students.