Baltimore City Public Schools could come up short as it looks ahead to planning next year's budget, CEO Sonja Santelises said.

"There's a projected budget gap of about $60 million," Santelises said.

Speaking at a City Council committee hearing Tuesday night, Santelises gave council members a closer look at the district's financial books and predicting what may lie ahead.

"We have been proactive in my administration in seeking out outside eyes. We have not been insular," Santelises said.

The district is focused on six months down to road, when millions of state dollars from a three-year funding package called Bridge to Kirwan will run out.

"I have to say, we have to do due diligence and really begin to ask the question, when the bridge goes away, what will take its place?" Santelises told 11 News on Wednesday.

Baltimore is among the many school systems counting on lawmakers to do what's best for students as it relates to paying for critical education programs.

City school teachers are also keeping track of budget talks and count themselves among those concerned about what could happen next.

"We already have about a 300-teacher vacancy pool every school year, unfortunately. So I hope the district will not be putting any policies in place that lead to teacher cuts," said Diamont'e Brown, president of the Baltimore Teachers Union.

Santelises said deciding on potential teacher cuts may well depend on what takes place in the General Assembly between now and next spring. The CEO is holding what she calls a community conversation in Baltimore with Dr. William Kirwan, chair of the Kirwan Commission.