Title: Floridas Public Education Funding Crisis
1Floridas Public Education Funding Crisis
- Seminole County Public Schools
-
CALL TO ACTION
MIDDLE SCHOOL TOWN MEETING March 11, 2009
2Constitution of theState of Florida
- Article IX.
Section 1. Public education. -
- The education of children is a fundamental
value of - the people of the State of Florida. It is,
therefore, a - paramount duty of the state to make adequate
- provision for the education of all children
within its - borders.
3SCPS WILL CONTINUE TO OFFER A AAA EXPERIENCE
4ACADEMICS
- All K-12 schools are academically high performing
- Voluntary Pre-K (4 years olds) highest
performing in Central Florida - 0.5 Drop-out Rate
- 91.1 Graduation Rate
5BRIGHT FUTURE SCHOLARSHIPS
- 5,880 Seminole Students are receiving 14,539,445
in Bright Future Scholarships. - Source Florida Department of Education
- Latest data available 2/27/09
6 ARTS
- Art Music courses offered Pre-K through 12 at
all schools - All school bands rated superior
7ATHLETICS
- State Champions or Runner up State Champions in
ALL major sports - ? Basketball
- ? Baseball
- ? Wrestling
- ? Football
- ? Golf
8Historically Underfunded
- Florida ranks 50th lowest in the nation per
capita spending for K-12 education - SCPS ranks 58th lowest (of 67 Florida counties)
in per Student Funding - Source 2005-2006 U.S. Census Bureau
- Source DOE
9Operating Budget Funding Sources
- Sales taxes (54.5)
- Local property taxes (ad valorem 42.6)
- Other Local (1)
- Lottery (6.1 million)
- Federal (0.5) Discretionary Lottery
2,620,883 - School Recognition
3,560,902 - 6,181,785
- Note Percentage of total state education
budget since the - lottery began has slid from 60 to 51
10Why a Budget Crisis?
- State Revenue Shortfall of Sales Tax
- 2008 - 2009 2.3 billion (impacting 08-09
school year) - 2009 - 2010 4.0 billion (impacting 09-10
school year)
11(No Transcript)
12Per Pupil Funding
(Central Florida Districts)
- 08-09
- Orange 6,996
- Brevard 6,944
- Volusia 6,850
- Seminole 6,804
- Lake 6,683
13SCPS FUNDING FACTS
- On a per student basis, SCPS is ranked 58th
lowest out of the 67 Florida School Districts in
funding. - For 2006-2007, the percentage of the SCPS budget
spent on classroom expenditures was 65.4, the
2nd highest in Florida. - Of the operating budget, approximately 85 is
personnel costs (salaries benefits). - Tax Millage rates are set by the Legislature.
- SCPS is levying the maximum allowable millage.
14BUDGET RELATED ACTIONS THIS YEAR
- Reduced 328 positions
- Summer school limited to remedial (no
acceleration) - School supply budget cut 5
- Closed Quest Alternative School
- Hired substitute teachers (no benefits) for 2nd
semester - Increased fees for student field trips
- Reduced after school busing
15BUDGET RELATED ACTIONS THIS YEAR
- Eliminated teacher signing bonuses
- Reduced stipends for ESOL and reading
- endorsement
- Eliminated district supplement to the middle
- school sports
- Scaled back Student Museum
- Environmental Center Operations
-
16DISTRICT OFFICE OTHER REDUCTIONS/SAVINGS
- Increased room temperatures to 76º during
cooling season - district-wide
- Reduced 22 district office positions.
- Reduced district level supply budgets by 10
- Implemented hiring freeze
- Increase waiting period for health benefits
- Funded property insurance and equipment from
capital - budget
17Were at the Breaking Point!
- Special Legislative Session in January 2009
reduced our revenue by an additional 2 (9.1
million). - Additional Estimated 2 Reduction March 2009
(8.6 million) - The SCPS revenue for 2009-10 could be reduced by
an additional 15 or 64.2 million. - SCPS also lost 16.3 million in Capital Funds
(Construction, debt service).
18DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONMONITORED SCHOOL DISTRICTS
- FUND BALANCES LESS THAN 2
- Taylor 0
- Manatee 1.66
- Dade .27
- Jefferson .28
- Gulf 1.58
- Columbia 1.67
- Franklin 1.71
- Dixie 2.19
- 15 On Watch!!!
19WE MUSTCONVINCE LEGISLATORS TO
- Enact no new unfunded K-12 mandates
- Cap growth on voucher programs
- Delay for the 2009-2010 school year
- Class size amendment changes
- New middle school physical education expansion
- New K-8 virtual education
- New high school accountability requirements
- New curriculum standards (Next Generation)
20THE LEGISLATURE MUST ALSO GENERATE NEW K-12
FUNDING BY
-
- eliminating certain sales tax exemptions
- expanding collection of Internet/mail order sales
tax revenue - dedicating gaming revenue primarily to public
education - increasing tobacco and alcohol sales tax
- raising general sales tax by 1
21When do we start?
- Beginning January 2009
- Contact your legislators and state policy makers
through phone calls, emails, letters, visits and
organized responses. - Tell legislators and state policy makers it is
their paramount duty to adequately provide
funding for high quality public education.
22LCMS
G L M S
TEAGUE MS
23