Title: PENNSYLVANIAS K12 EDUCATION FUNDING SYSTEM
1PENNSYLVANIAS K-12 EDUCATION FUNDING SYSTEM
- presented to
- House Democratic Policy Committee
- April 7, 2009
- Ronald Cowell, President
- The Education Policy and Leadership Center
- for the
- Pennsylvania School Funding Campaign
2The Education Policy and Leadership Center
- Independent, not-for-profit, non-partisan
- Focus on state-level education policy
- Improve development and implementation
- Based in Harrisburg Programs throughout PA
- Information --- Leadership --- Advocacy
- An information resource for policymakers and the
public
3- Pennsylvania
- School Funding Campaign
- Successful Schools
- Successful Children
- Successful Communities
- www.paschoolfunding.org
- See Attached List of Steering Committee
Organizations
4- DISCUSSION OF EDUCATION POLICY DOES NOT BEGIN
WITH DISCUSSION OF MONEY Instead, funding
discussion should flow out of a broader set of
education policies. - CONSIDER THIS FRAMEWORK FOR DISCUSSION OF
EDUCATION POLICY - Governance
- Standards (Expectations Student Achievement)
- Assessment (How are we doing)
- Consequences (Get everyone to take seriously)
- Educational Capacity (What works)
- EDUCATION FINANCE
- Alignment
5- WHY STATE FUNDING FOR EDUCATION
- State Constitutional Mandate for General
Assembly to provide for System of Schools - State Incentive for local government to fund
schools - State funding to reduce local taxes
- Need for Equity
- Need for Adequacy
6PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1776 State Constitution A school or schools
shall be established in each county by the
legislature, for the convenient instruction of
youth. - 1790 State Constitution The legislature shall,
as soon as conveniently may be, provide, by law,
for the establishment of schools throughout the
State, in such manner that the poor may be taught
gratis. - 1831 Common School Fund established with
100,000 per year available
7PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1834 Free School Act required each municipality
to establish an elected school board state
funding if matched at least 21 by county dollars
- 1835-1897 State school funding to counties
based on number of taxable inhabitants in county - Attempt in 1863 to base funding on number of
children failed because of difficulty in counting
children in attendance
8PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1874 PA Constitution The General Assembly
shall provide for the maintenance and support of
a thorough and efficient system of public
schools, wherein all the children of this
Commonwealth above the age of six years may be
educated, and shall appropriate at least one
million dollars each year for that purpose. - 1895 PAs first compulsory attendance law
- 1897 Number of children ages 6-16 added to
state funding formula
9PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1923 First effort to use state funding for
equalization - 1930 to 1950 State aid increases from 17 to
40 of costs - 1947 General Assembly creates State Tax
Equalization Board to determine true market
values of real property in each school district - 1949 New School Code - State aid based upon
district teaching units X fixed dollar figure
established by Legislature X districts standard
reimbursement fraction
10PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1957 State aid formula begins to consider
actual instructional expense (AIE) - Mid 60s-1983 Statutory goal that the state pay
50 of the statewide district instructional costs - 1968 For 1966-67 school year and thereafter,
State began to pay on basis of weighted pupils
and local wealth state also began to make
additional payments for children in poverty,
density, sparsity, and homebound instruction
11PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1971 State income tax established
- 1974-75 State reimbursement at 54
- 1977 Personal income valuation becomes a factor
in determining district aid ratio (40) - 1977-1980 State reimbursement averages 46 per
year - 1982 All districts held harmless plus 72
million supplement for Equalized Supplement for
Student Learning (ESSL)
12PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1983 Equalized Subsidy for Basic Education
(ESBE) enacted includes Factor for Educational
Expense (FEE) removes 50 funding goal - 1991 PARSS Equity Suit filed
- 1991 Special Education funding changed
- 1992 ESBE abandoned
- 1993 and 1994 Modest foundation funding
guarantee included in state funding
13PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 1995-2002 Ridge/Schweiker Administration
- Vouchers Charter School Funding
- Link to Learn Read to Succeed
- 1998- Commonwealth Court rejects PARSS v. Ridge
funding is not for courts to decide - 2002 Gubernatorial Campaign/Election
- 2003-04 Budget Debate until 12/03
- Accountability Block Grants in 2004-05
14PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
- 2006 Legislature mandates a Costing-Out Study
- November 2007 Costing-Out Study is reported
- February 2008 Governor proposes 6-Year Plan
- July 2008 Legislature approves 6-Year Plan
15 KEY ELEMENTS OF 1980s ESBE FORMULA
- WADMs (Number of Students)
- X
- Aid Ratio (Relative Wealth of District)
- X
- FEE (Cost Factor)
-
- Basic Subsidy to the District
-
- Other Factors (poverty, density, etc.)
16 SUBSIDY PLUS OTHER
- Poverty
- Density
- Sparsity
- Hold Harmless for Basic Subsidy
- Transportation
- Special education
- Charter Schools
17 PUBLIC K-12 SPENDING
-
- 2006-07 1991-92
- Amount Rank Amount Rank
- Per Pupil Amounts for Current Spending
- US 9,683 --- 5,001 ---
- PA 10,905 14th 6,050 6th
- Source US Department of Education - March 2009
18 PUBLIC K-12 SPENDING
- CURRENT EXPENDITURES PER STUDENT - 2006-07
- Compared to contiguous states, spending in
Pennsylvania was far below average and ranked 5th
in a group of seven states, exceeding only Ohio
and West Virginia, but trailing Delaware,
Maryland, New Jersey and New York. -
- Pennsylvania 10,905
- National 9,663
- Delaware 15,511
- Maryland 11,975
- New Jersey 16,163
- New York 15,546
- Ohio 9,940
- West Virginia 9,727
- Source US Department of Education - March 2009
19SO WHATS THE PROBLEM?
20 WHAT HAS BEEN WRONG WITH THE PA FUNDING SYSTEM
- State Share in bottom five in nation
- State Appropriations Per Student below national
average - Disproportionate share of state funds are
withheld from poorer districts - Therefore, districts too dependent on Local
Wealth Property Taxes - Therefore, great Inequity and Inadequacy among
501 school districts
21GOAL OF 50 STATE SHARE ABANDONED
(1983)STATEWIDE ED FUNDING FORMULA ABANDONED
(1991)
22 SPECIAL EDUCATION FUNDING
- State paid 100 excess cost until 1991
- New formula as of 1991-92
- Assumes 1 and 15 incidence rates
- No consideration of district costs or wealth
- In 2005-06, more than 1 billion non-reimbursed
23 CHARTER SCHOOL FUNDING
- Approved by district or state appeal board
- No limit on number in state
- Cost borne by local districts
- Law assumes some savings to districts
- More than half-billion/year cost to districts
- Since 2002-03, state will pay up to 30
- Cyber charter schools
24 - OTHER COST DRIVERS
- Retirement Costs
- Health Care Costs
- Construction
- Task Force on School Cost Reduction
25 STATE/LOCAL SHARES for
Elementary/Secondary Public Education
- State Share
Local Share - PA National
PA National - 2006-07 36.2 (47.6) 56.5 (43.9)
- 2005-06 35.0 (46.6) 57.1 (44.4)
- 2004-05 35.6 (47.0)
56.2 (43.9) - 2003-04 35.9 (47.1) 56.1 (43.9)
- 2002-03 36.7 (49.0) 55.8 (42.7)
- 2001-02 37.4 (49.4) 55.3 (42.8)
- 2000-01 37.3 (49.9) 56.3 (43.0)
- 1999-00 37.9 (49.8) 55.8 (43.1)
- 1998-99 38.3 (49.5) 55.8 (43.6)
- 1997-98 38.7 (49.0)
55.5 (44.4) - 1996-97 39.2 (48.8) 55.4 (44.8)
- 1995-96 39.8 (48.1) 54.8 (45.5)
- 1994-95 40.0 (47.5) 54.8 (46.0)
- 1993-94 40.1 (45.9) 54.5 (47.6)
- 1992-93 39.9 (46.4) 54.2 (47.0)
- 1991-92 41.0 (47.3) 53.3 (46.2)
26 STATE/LOCAL SHARES for
Elementary/Secondary Public Education2006-2007
-
- State Share Local Share
- Pennsylvania 36.2 56.5
- National 47.6 43.9
- Delaware 63.1 29.4
- Maryland 40.3 53.8
- New Jersey 42.1 53.5
- New York 43.5 49.8
- Ohio 44.5 48.4
- West Virginia 59.5 28.8
- Source US Department of Education - March 2009
- 1 in PA in 2006-2007 approximately 230
million
27PUBLIC K-12 REVENUEPER 1,000 PERSONAL INCOME
- 2005-06 1991-92
- Amount Rank Amount
Rank - US - Total 50.67 --- 48.87 ---
- PA - Total 52.73 20th 49.98
27th - US Local 22.48 ---
23.25 --- - PA Local- 30.11 4th 27.24
13th - US State 23.61 --- 22.43
--- - PA State- 18.46 40th 20.25
36th -
- Differences to 100 come from federal sources.
Source US Census Bureau. 2008
28 STATE FUNDING APPROPRIATED PER STUDENTSource
US Census Bureau April 2008
29 RESULT 2005-06 BURDEN ON LOCAL PROPERTY TAXES
- Total K-12 State- Local K-12 from
- wide Revenues Property Taxes Prop Taxes
- US 521,116,397 147,249,385 28.25
-
- PA 22,772,190 10,009,710 43.95
- in ooos
- Source US Census Bureau April 2008
- 15.5 Difference more than 3.575 billion/year
30 RESULT INEQUITY FOR
STUDENTS ACROSS PA
- Great Inequity for Students
- Among 501 Districts
- In 2005-06, instructional spending per pupil in
Pennsylvania school districts ranged
from 4,469 to 14,045 - This means, in an average classroom of 25
students, a gap of almost 250,000 per classroom
per year. -
31 RESULT INEQUITY FOR TAXPAYERS ACROSS PA
- Great Discrepancies in Local Effort and Resultant
Burden on Local Taxpayers
32 RESULT INADEQUATE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES IN
MANY DISTRICTS
- Qualified Teachers
- Class Size
- Early Ed/Kindergarten Programs
- Curriculum
- Books, Computers and Materials
- Labs, Foreign Languages, Honors/AP Courses
- Facilities not conducive to learning
33 ADEQUATE FOR WHAT?
- The Expectations for Student Performance
Established by PAs Academic Standards - The Expectations of No Child Left Behind Law and
Related Policies -
-
34 NCSL Report on School FinanceAn ADEQUATE
School Funding System will provide and ensure the
use of sufficient funding to establish and
maintain the effective and necessary
educational capacity to provide every student
in every school a meaningful opportunity to
accomplish the academic proficiencies for which
he or she will be held accountable.
35 PA TAX RELIEF EFFORTS
- Act 72 of 2004
- Act 1 of 2006 Special Session on Property Tax
Relief Legalize slots - Nothing to do with improving education funding
system or meeting the needs of students - Intentionally limits ability of districts to
raise local revenues (referendum)
36 ACKNOWLEDGE SOME PROGRESS in 2003-2007
- State Funding for Pre-School started
- Basic Subsidy line item increased
- Attention to Foundation funding
- Accountability Block Grants initiated
- School districts reimbursed 27 for charter
school payments - Legislature mandates a Costing-Out Study linked
to states academic standards
37 OTHER RELEVANT ACTIVITY
- 2007 Report on Cost Reduction
- Statewide Health Benefits Program
- Education Finance Reform Commission
- Discussion about TABOR, limits on state
spending/taxes, tax cuts - More Property Tax Relief/Elimination
- School District Consolidation
38- Principles of a Sound Statewide Education
Finance System - Equity
- Adequacy
- Accountability
- Efficiency
- Predictability
39 QUESTIONS FOR STATE POLICYMAKERS
- How much state funding? Appropriate share?
- By what formula will state funding be
distributed? - What conditions will be attached to the state
funds? - What taxing authority will be provided to
generate local revenues? - Should state funds be targeted for some
students/districts or generally available for
all? - Should state funds be distributed via categorical
purposes vs. basic subsidy?
40 BIG ISSUES
- Should every student have a fundamental right to
a quality public education? - What is student or school success? What do we
value? How do we measure it? - Does Money Matter? Consider both the amount and
how it is used! - Accountability for what? Inputs or Performance?
With what consequences?
41 BIG ISSUES
- Hold Harmless every year?
- Who should pay for state mandates?
- Tension of Local Control of Funding vs.
- State Requirements/Conditions attached to
some/all of the Funding. - How can state funding be used most effectively to
level the playing field of opportunity? -
42 2007 COSTING-OUT STUDY
- Mandated by General Assembly in 2006
- Commissioned by State Board of Education
- Conducted Augenblick Palaisch
- Reported in November 2007
- Cost of all students accomplishing proficiency in
all areas of standards - Considered special ed, poverty, ELL, regional
costs - Identified district-by-district a total spending
gap of 4.6 billion
43 NEW BASIC FORMULA IN 2008-2009
- Linked to Costing-Out Study
- Increase State Funding by 2.6 billion over 6
years - Gets state share to 44 in 6 years
44 ACCOUNTABILITY
- Districts receiving basic ed increase above Act 1
inflation index must spend portion above index on
proven school improvement strategies - Districts identified as Warning, Improvement or
Corrective Action districts with a school
identified for Improvement or Corrective Action
must have PDE approval for use of resources above
inflation index
45 FOR MORE INFORMATION
-
- Ronald Cowell
- The Education Policy and Leadership Center
- 717-260-9900
- cowell_at_eplc.org
- www.eplc.org