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School Finance in Arizona Chuck Essigs AASBO. Funding of Schools. 1900 - 1950 Very little state assistance Very little state control Ability to fund educational programs based upon wealth of community 1950 – Today Gradual increase in state assistance Gradual increase in state control
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Funding of Schools • 1900 - 1950 • Very little state assistance • Very little state control • Ability to fund educational programs based upon wealth of community • 1950 – Today • Gradual increase in state assistance • Gradual increase in state control • Higher level of equity between school districts
How is the Budget Limit Established?Revenue Control Limit (RCL) 1. Regular ADM of the District a. Preschool Handicapped b. K-8 Students c. 9-12 Students 2. Special Program Add-ons a. Certain Handicapped Students b. Limited English Learners (ELL) c. K-3 Students d. All K students 3. Teacher Experience Index 4. Pupil Transportation Program
2008-09 Group A ConceptElementary and High School Basic Wt. Group A Wt.Total* Elem. 1.00 0.158 1.158 $3,332 $526 $3,858 1.163 0.105 1.268 H.S. $3,875 $350 $4,225 Regular education - special services: Specific learning disability Emotional disability Mild mental retardation Remedial education Speech/language impairment Homebound Other health impairment Bilingual Preschool/speech lang. delay Gifted Preschool/moderate delay Career Exploration *Includes 1.25% for “Teacher Compensation”
Small School District Funding Weights2008-09 School Year Elementary High School District Small Small Size Isolated SmallIsolated Small Over 600 $3,858 $3,858 $4,225 $4,225 500 400 increases up to 300 200 100 $5,194 $4,560 $5,560 $5,194 *Isolated = no schools within 30 miles of another district or if road conditions and terrain make the driving slow or hazardous; 15 miles
Group B Add-On CategoryWeightAmount K 1.352 $4,505* K-3 0.060 $200 English Learners 0.115 $383 Disabled Students Range from $10,502 to $25,711 Hearing Impaired, Multiple Disabilities, Physically Impaired, Moderate Mental Retardation, Severely Emotionally Disabled and Visual Impairment * at 0.50 = $2,252
Group A Concept Extra funding for Expenditures for every student = special needs students • No financial incentive to put student in • No financial incentive not to end services • Assumes fairly equal distribution of students
Group B Concept Extra funding for Expenditures for specific students = specific students • Identification criteria clear • Parents follow programs
Capital Outlay Revenue Limit (CORL) Note: 64% transferred to M&O Unweighted Student Count times Support Level times CORL growth factor plus High School Texts
Soft Capital Unweighted Student Count times Support Level
2008-09 CORL and Soft Capital Amounts* • CORL K-8 = $225.76 • CORL 9-12 = $267.94 • CORL textbooks 9-12 = $69.88 • Soft Capital = $225.00 * Same amount since 1998-99 for all areas
Additional AssistanceCharter Schools • Charter Schools / CORL, Soft Capital, Pupil Transportation, School Facilities Board (SFB) • Additional Assistance 2008-09 K – 8 $1,474.16 9 – 12 $1,718.10
District Base Level Add-ons • Teacher compensation • Increase Base Level by 1.25% in SBE approves “performance evaluation system” i.e. certification • Teacher experience index • 2.25% increase to BSL for each year of experience above average • Career ladder • 28 districts get additional 5.5% increase to Base Level
Equalization Concept School District Spending Limit(Equalization Base) minus Local Contribution (QTR) equals State Aid (Equalization Assistance)
“Property Rich” $3,226.88 x 1,000 (weighted ADM) $3,226,880 guaranteed Local property taxes $50,000,000/$100 (district’s taxable value) x $2.9244 QTR equals$1,462,200 (45% of guaranteed amount) State (& county) $3,226,880 minus $1,462,200 equals$1,764,680 (55% of guaranteed amount) “Property Poor” $3,226.88 x 1,000 (weighted ADM) $3,226,880 guaranteed Local property taxes $25,000,000/$100 (district’s taxable value) x $2.9244 QTR equals$731,000 (23% of guaranteed amount) State (& county) $ 3,226,880 minus $731,100 equals$2,496,780 (77% of guaranteed amount) Two Hypothetical Unified Districts
Some District Budget Categories . . . • are paid from local property taxes . . . • . . . causing issues with per-pupil spending and taxation
M&O Overrides • M&O Overrides • 10% of RCL • K-3 Overrides • 5% of K-8 RCL
Other Items Outside Equalization Base, FY 2008 • Desegregation • Adjacent Ways • Excess Utilities • Transportation RCL • Small School Dist. • Dropout Prevention • Registered Warrants
Inflation Funding 1991-92 through 2000-01 • Increases to Base Level • Increase less than inflation for 9 or 10 years • Inflation funding covered one-third of actual inflation
Prop. 301 / Implemented in 2001-02 School year • For first 5 years – 2% • For FY2006-07 and each year thereafter, the Legislature is required to increase the Base Level or other RCL components by the lesser of 2% or the price deflator.
Inflation Impact – Post Prop. 301 (continued) 2001-02 2.2 2.0 <0.2> 2002-03 2.4 2.0 <0.4> 2003-04 1.7 2.0 0.3 2004-05 2.9 2.0 0.9 2005-06 2.2 3.2*** 1.0 2006-07 3.2 4.4**** 1.2 2007-08 3.2 2.98***** <0.22> 2008-09 2.7 2.0 <0.7> * Percentage growth in the GNP price deflator ** Percentage increase in the base level funding factor as provided in A.R.S. 15-901 *** Includes an additional 1.2% for retirement/health insurance **** Includes an additional 2.4% for retirement/health insurance and increase salary for non-administrative personnel ***** Includes 0.98% for increased salary for non-admin. personnel YearActual Rate * Funding Inc.** Variation
Education Week Rankings Adequacy of Funding • Rank 49th out of 50 • Arizona $7,112 vs. national average of $9.963
Education Week Rankings Education Spending Per Pupil FY2006 (Operational) RankStateAmount 1 Vermont $15,139 2 Wyoming $14,128 3 New Jersey $13,238 Avg. U. S. $9,963 48 Nevada $7,213 49 Arizona $7,112 50 Utah $5,964
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) Arizona (2005-06) (Operations) • Expenditure Per Pupil rank next to last • Pupil/Teacher Ratio = 21.3 vs. national average of 15.2 • Pupil/Teacher Ratio rank next to highest (only Utah at 22.1 puts more kids in each class)
Move to National Average • Using ALEC data, Arizona is $2,956 below national average • 46% increase to move to average • Estimated cost is $3 billion • 2% inflation - $100 million • 30 years of extra 2% needed
Also Part of the Spending Per Pupil Discussion / Capital Spending Arizona ranks near the top for: • student growth • capital expenditures per pupil • student/teacher ratio
Other Major Revenue Sources 2008-09 • Classroom Site Fund – Prop. 301 ($470 per student / $390 per weighted count) • Instructional Improvement Fund – Indian Gaming ($40 per student)
School District Governing Board Allocates Funds to Regular, Special and Pupil Transportation Program from Budget Limit Budget Limit Regular Education Special Education Pupil Transportation Special Ed. includes: A. Programs for the handicapped B. Gifted education C. Programs for LEP students D. Remedial education E. Vocational and technical education F. Career education
Budget Limit Increase No GrowthGrowthDecline New students 2% 0 <3%> Plus inc. amt./stu. + 2% + 2% + 2% 4% 2% <1%> Hire new Salary Cuts staff + Increase salary increase
Salary and Benefits 85 – 90% of operating budget
Taxpayer Parents and Community Employees More Services More Services Taxes High Quality Higher Salaries Governing Board Budget
Not enough dollars to meet demands Formula / Legislature • Dollars not being spent effectively Budget Allocation / School District