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Strengthening Local Control. Converting San Lorenzo Valley USD to a Charter School District. Presentation Overview. Why Charter? Charter Funding District Budget Outlook. Why Charter?. Enhanced local control Focus on measurable results Freedom from bureaucratic rules and “red tape”
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Strengthening Local Control Converting San Lorenzo Valley USD to a Charter School District
Presentation Overview • Why Charter? • Charter Funding • District Budget Outlook
Why Charter? • Enhanced local control • Focus on measurable results • Freedom from bureaucratic rules and “red tape” • Funding that reflects the true cost of delivering education
Why Charter?The Charter Compact • District agrees to: • Strict accountability based on measurable educational outcomes • SPI/State Board of Education grant: • Enhanced local control over budget, staffing, curriculum, and teaching methods
Charter FundingFunding Sources • Block grant • General-purpose • Categorical • Special education • Other state and federal programs
Charter FundingGeneral-purpose Block Grant (01-02 est.) • Average daily attendance (ADA) • (K-3) * $4,405 • (4-6) * $4,466 • (7-8) * $4,597 • (9-12) * $5,335
Charter FundingCategorical Block Grant (01-02 est.) • Average daily attendance (ADA) • (K-3) * $341 • (4-6) * $351 • (7-8) * $256 • (9-12) * $325 • (ELL + low-income) * $95
Charter FundingCategorical Block Grant • Block grant is in lieu of funding for specified state categorical programs, thus… • Charter districts are ineligible to apply separately for programs included in block grant
Beginning teacher salary Digital high school Economic Impact Aid Gifted and Talented Instructional materials K-4 reading Ninth grade CSR Partnership Academies School Improvement School safety Supplemental grant Teacher PAR Tenth grade counseling Charter FundingPrograms Included in Block Grant
Charter Funding Other Funding Sources • Special education • State programs not included within block grant* • Federal programs no change no change no change * K-3 class-size reduction, home-to-school transportation, school facilities aid, summer school/after school, staff development buy-back
Revenue Comparison (thousands)Charter District vs. Status Quo (01-02 est.) “Bottom Line”: District gains $710,000
Declining EnrollmentThe Funding Squeeze • District loses 100 students • Revenue loss @ $4,528 per pupil $452,800 • District lays off 4 teachers • Savings @ $50,000 (sal/benefits) -200,000 Additional cuts needed$252,800
What Has District Doneto Cope with Enrollment Loss? • Expanded alternative education/charters • Keeps students in District • Increases revenues by $600,000+ annually • “Freed up” unrestricted resources with categorical funds • $379,000 in 2000-01, $65,000 thereafter • Maximized grants and donations • Packard Foundation, Field of Dreams
Defining the Problem:Declining Enrollment or Raises? • FACT: All districts received an 11% increase in unrestricted funding per-pupil • FACT: SLVUSD must pay competitive wages to retain high-quality staff • FACT: SLVUSD could afford to grant all employees a 10% salary increase, were it not for declining enrollment.
Enrollment-related* Cuts (millions)Status Quo $2.4 million *Funding loss due to enrollment decrease since 1999-00.
Declining EnrollmentBridging the $2.4 Million Gap • Charter District $710,000 • Employee raises below 10% 800,000 • Classified & management 6.2% • Teachers retro to 11/1/2000 • Staff dev buy-back & beg teacher • Ongoing Spending Cuts 414,000 • Administrative cuts -- $100,000 • Other cuts -- $314,000 • One-Time Spending Cuts 286,000 • Beginning Balance 191,000 TOTAL $2,401,000
Enrollment-related* Cuts (millions)Status Quo Cumulative additional cuts: $8.1 million *Funding loss due to enrollment decrease since 1999-00.
Enrollment-related* Cuts (millions)Charter District Cumulative additional cuts: $4.6 million *Funding loss due to enrollment decrease since 1999-00.
The “Bottom Line”Cumulative Cuts Over 5 Years • Status Quo $8.1 million • Charter District 4.6 million • Difference $3.5 million SAVINGS: $700,000 PER YEAR