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Finance Overview: AEA’s/LEA’s . Barb Harms Business Manager Grant Wood Area Education Agency Management Team Meeting – 11/3/06 . How AEA’s are Funded:. Per pupil funding based on LEA enrollments Formula is separate for 3 service areas (Media, Ed Services, Special Education)
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Finance Overview: AEA’s/LEA’s Barb Harms Business Manager Grant Wood Area Education Agency Management Team Meeting – 11/3/06
How AEA’s are Funded: • Per pupil funding based on LEA enrollments • Formula is separate for 3 service areas (Media, Ed Services, Special Education) • No direct taxing authority
Other AEA Revenues: • Federal funds – IDEA, Part C, etc. • Various other state, local grants • Sales of non-mandated services (such as printing, computer services, SEMS) • AEA’s also receive State funding for Juvenile Home/Shelter instructional programs
“Show-through” concept: • Each district includes the AEA per pupil funds in their budget to generate the dollars earmarked for AEA’s. • Districts generate property taxes for the AEA’s through their levy rate • The funnel is on paper only – dollars actually are paid directly from the State to each AEA
Finance Formula: • AEA cost per pupil X enrollment • Cost per pupil grows each year by the allowable growth amount (4% for FY 08) • Child-based: allowable spending is based on number of students counted
Finance Formula (cont’d): • Special Education Services • Funding is a mix of State aid & prop taxes • Enrollment includes weighting for children with IEP’s AEA cost per pupil X Weighted Enrollment = Budget for Special Education services
Finance Formula (cont’d): • Media/Technology and Educational Services • Funded entirely from property taxes • Enrollment includes approved nonpublics AEA cost per pupil X Actual Enrollment (public & nonpublic) = Budgets for Media/Ed Services
Finance Formula (cont’d): Special Education $16,754,381 Media Services $ 2,927,692 Educational Services $ 3,213,132 State Reduction $ (1,999,562) “Controlled Funding” $20,895,643
Funding for LEA’s: 5 basic principles • Funding based on number of students • State “equalizes” funding through a mix of state aid & property taxes • Legislature sets allowable growth – the annual increase in the “cost per student” • Local property taxes are a critical part of the formula • Funding sources have restrictions on their use
Funding for LEA’s: • # 1: Funding based on number of students Increases or decreases in enrollment affect district budgets. • The count on October 1 is used to establish the district’s budget for the following year • That means revenues are always a year behind the actual number of children we are serving in our classrooms
Funding for LEA’s: • # 2: Equalization - the school aid formula relies on two sources of revenue • State General Fund appropriations • Locally raised property taxes • Results in a maximum expenditure per pupil and therefore a maximum amount a district can raise and spend
School Foundation Formula • Three components • Uniform Levy - Property tax levy of $5.40 per thousand of taxable valuation. • State Foundation Percentage - Amount the state pays in excess of $5.40 - varies by district (87.5% of cost per pupil). • Additional Levy - Property tax levy which funds the difference between the Combined District Cost and the sum of the Uniform Levy and the State Foundation Percentage.
School Finance - Spending Authority • Spending authority is the sum of: • Combined District Cost (property tax and state aid) • Miscellaneous income • Unspent balance from previous years • Why important? • Districts cannot exceed spending authority • Not the same as cash
Funding for LEA’s: • # 3: Allowable growth The Legislature sets the annual increase in the “cost per student”. • Growth rate is set over a year in advance to allow schools to meet budget deadlines • Rate for 2006-07 was 4% ($5,128 per student) • Rate for 2007-08 is 4% ($5,333 per student)
Funding for LEA’s: • # 3: Allowable growth (cont’d) • When is 4% allowable growth not 4%? • If a district has an enrollment increase, their “new money” will be more than 4% • If a district has an enrollment decline, their “new money” will be less than 4% • The budget guarantee has been used to cushion districts that have enrollment declines – it is now being phased out
Funding for LEA’s: • # 4: Local property taxes Why not remove property taxes from formula? • Lawmakers would have to replace $1.1 billion dollars statewide with sales tax or income tax • Property taxes add stability – if sales tax was used, funding would fluctuate based on spending
Funding for LEA’s: • # 5: Restrictions on funding sources • Finance formula revenues go to the General Fund (salaries, supplies, etc.) • Other funding streams for facilities • Can’t be commingled or use excess in general fund for facilities
LEA Funding - Facilities Facility Related Levies • Board-Approved Physical Plant and Equipment Levy (PPEL). • Voter-Approved PPEL - simple majority vote required. • Bonded Debt - requires 60% majority vote, then Debt Service levy used to repay debt • Public Education and Recreation Levy (PERL). Public use playgrounds/recreation facilities. • Local option sales tax - maximum of $0.01 additional local option sales tax for school infrastructure - 97 of 99 counties have this
Funding for LEA’s: • Program Levies • Instructional Support Levy (ISL) • Maximum of 10% of Regular Program Budget. • Can be either property taxes or income surtax, or combination. • Can be board-approved (maximum five years - subject to petition) or voter-approved (maximum 10 years).
LEA Funding - Other Levies • Management Levy • Used to pay unemployment benefits, property insurance and early retirement benefits. • Cash Reserve Levy • Used to generate cash for the General Fund of the school district. • Generated by property tax via school board action annually. • Used to fund spending authority but does not directly generate spending authority.
Summarizing AEA/LEA Finance • What is common? • State funding based on number of students • Other revenues from grants, misc sources • Allowable growth • Weighted enrollment
Summarizing AEA/LEA Finance • What is different? • Schools have taxing authority, AEA’s don’t • LEA finance formula is more complex • Schools have separate funding sources for facilities & other costs • AEA’s generate revenues from sales of non-mandated services
School Finance - Web Resources • IASB: www.ia-sb.org • IASBO: www.iowa-asbo.org • Dept. of Education: www.state.ia.us/educate/index.html • Legislature - bills, amendments, etc. www.legis.state.ia.us • Dept. of Revenue and Finance: www.state.ia.us/government/drf/index.html
School Finance - Contacts • Iowa Association of School Boards (IASB) • Larry Sigel, School Finance Director 515-288-1991 ext. 235 lsigel@ia-sb.org