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Efficient and effective schools for ohio. Education Efficiency Initiative: Finding ways to save money while improving student achievement. The Governor’s charge. Gov. Ted Strickland asked KnowledgeWorks to lead comprehensive review of K-12 education system to: find efficiencies
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Efficient and effective schools for ohio Education Efficiency Initiative: Finding ways to save money while improving student achievement
The Governor’s charge Gov. Ted Strickland asked KnowledgeWorks to lead comprehensive review of K-12 education system to: • find efficiencies • maintain focus and investment on improving student achievement Initiative is to: • be collaborative, nonpartisan effort with full range of interests involved • identify achievable near- and long-term goals for modernization and efficiency • share findings for consideration in the next biennial budget
Context for initiative Ohio is in midst of economic crisis • Estimated budget shortfall of $8 billion in next biennium • High unemployment rate and rising Medicaid costs But maintaining education reforms is critical • Education and school finance reforms of HB 1
Our approach · Find ways to improve student achievement without raising costs. · Find ways to reduce spending without hurting student achievement. · Find additional community resources to help support student achievement.
Reduce spending without hurting student achievement Possible strategies • Identify districts that seem to get more for their money in non-instructional spending areas and encourage best practices • Enable greater collaboration among districts and schools to share services • Looking for ideas • How can districts use economies of scale in their favor? • Does the state have a role in economies of scale?
Smart Schools Areas of Focus • Pensions • Healthcare • Compensation • Education Technology • Charters
How we’ll proceed • Collaboration • Transparency • Outreach • Research-based ideas • Bipartisanship • Comprehensive review
How can Ohioans help? • Provide feedback • Participate in studies • Generate and share ideas • Help champion good ideas • OhioSmartSchools.org
One Area of Focus: Healthcare • Healthcare is the number two expense to school districts after salary • Ohio has approximately 191,077 enrollees in its school employee healthcare plans, at an annual cost of approximately $1.9 billion • About 72% of districts participate in consortia
OH sets context for reform • Ohio passed legislation advocating implementation of statewide pool for school district health insurance plans began in the state’s 2005 biennium budget bill. • Am. Sub. H.B. 66 established School Employees Health Care Board (SEHCB) to create plan by the close of 2006 • The SEHCB contracted with the Mercer Group to develop a state pooling plan in compliance with legislative mandate
Revisiting HC Pools • KnowledgeWorks contracted with University of Cincinnati’s Economics Center (UCEC) to examine potential strategies to generate savings and to provide current context to Mercer’s original savings estimates.
Revisiting HC Pools (2) • In its Analysis of School Employee Health Benefits: Update to the 2006 Mercer study (November, 2010), UCEC says school districts are already spending about $154 million less in 2010 than Mercer projections. • Recession has depressed healthcare inflation • School districts capturing savings through changes implemented since 2006
Revisiting HC Pools (3) • UCEC found additional savings from pooling may be obtainable through the following options: • A mandatory program in which all remaining districts would be covered in a consortia could generate up to $35 million in savings. • Mandating five regional pools or a single statewide pool is estimated to produce about $132 to $138 million in savings, respectively
Greg Harris, PhD Public Policy Advisor harrisg@ohioeducationmatters.org www.OhioEducationMatters.org