Title: April 2004 Parent Leadership Summit
1April 2004Parent Leadership Summit
- Education Funding in Minnesota
- How Did We get Here?
2Minnesota State Constitution
- Section 1.UNIFORM SYSTEM OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS. The
stability of a republican form of government
depending mainly upon the intelligence of the
people, it is the duty of the legislature to
establish a general and uniform system of public
schools. The legislature shall make such
provisions by taxation or otherwise as will
secure a thorough and efficient system of public
schools throughout the state.
3How Public Schools are Funded
- The legislature taxes, funds and regulates
- School boards dispense funds
4The Legislative Process
- The Minnesota State Legislature works on a
biennium basis. - One year for policy and the next for funding.
- In its funding session, the Legislature sets the
per pupil formula for the next two years.
5Major Sources of Revenue for a School Districts
Operating Fund
- 86 State
- 7.3 Local Levies
- 3.6 other sources
- grants
- fund raising
- fees
- 3.1 Federal
6The Funding Process
-
- Per pupil formula
- x AMCPU (adjusted marginal cost pupil units)
- District Operating fund (General Fund)
7Basic Skills revenue
- ELL (700/pu capped _at_ 5 years)
- Compensatory (capped _at_ 2512/pu)
- Transportation sparsity funding
- Special Education funds
- State 9,800 average/pu
- Federal 1,100 average/pu
8Average General Fund Dollars in Minnesotas
public schools
- According to the states 2003
- Education Finance Task Force report Minnesota
school districts receive 7,615 per pupil
9How Did We Get Here?
- 1. A per pupil formula that has averaged 1.14
increase annually - 2. State policies reforming property tax
- 3. The 2001 General Education Buy Down
- 4. No New Tax Pledge
10Per Pupil Formula Analysis
11Flat per pupil formula
- The true per pupil formula grew an average of
1.14 annually - Expenses in districts grew an average of 5
annually
12How Did We Get Here?
- 1. A per pupil formula that has averaged 1.14
increase annually - 2. State policies reforming property tax
- 3. The 2001 General Education Buy Down
- 4. No New Tax Pledge
13State policies to reform property taxes
- Class rates for taxing businesses were reduced to
more closely resemble residential property tax
rates - Agricultural and recreational land removed from
the equation for school taxes - General Education Fund Buy Down
14Annual School Taxes 1997-2002 on a 250,000 Home
15How Did We Get Here?
- 1. A per pupil formula that has averaged 1.14
increase annually - 2. State policies reforming property tax
- 3. The 2001 General Education Fund Buy Down
- 4. No New Tax Pledge
16General Fund Buy Down
- In 2001, the state accepted the liability of
funding 85 of - public schools cost
- Passed half of the legislationthe liability was
accepted, without a revenue stream to support it. - Destabilized the funding source for schools and
now makes them reliant on the states economy
17Change in percent of school revenue from the state
18How Did We Get Here?
- 1. A per pupil formula that has averaged 1.14
increase annually - 2. State policies reforming property tax
- 3. The 2001 General Education Fund Buy Down
- 4. No New Tax Pledge
19The Decades Mantra
20No New Tax Pledge
- Developed by
- the Minnesota Taxpayers League whose website
states - Everybody knows we pay too much in taxes.
- -David Strom
- The Taxpayers League has been successful because
we take our case to the people of Minnesota. It
is our goal to reach out to and persuade as many
Minnesotans as possible - -David Strom, Legislative Director of the
Taxpayers League.
21Price of Government
-
- The Price of Government is the State of
Minnesotas official measure and is factored as
total revenue as a percentage of personal income.
22Requirements for public schools grew while
funding did not
- Testing
- Standards
- Special education mandates
- Transportation
- English Language Learning
- Days added to the school year
- Health and safety mandates
- Physical Education
- HIV/AIDS Sex Education
- Drug/Alcohol Abuse Education
- Bus Safety
- Title 1 programs
23NCLB
- No Child Left Behind is possibly the largest
unfunded/under-funded mandate the federal
government has ever imposed on public schools. - The Office of The Legislative Auditor, State of
Minnesota has said Even if students math and
reading scores improve significantly in coming
yearsmore than 80 of Minnesota elementary
schools would not make AYP by 2014...and this
could trigger expensive sanctionsOLA Evaluation
Report 2/26/04 - The US Department of Education contends that
NCLB is appropriately funded. Yet in 2004-05,
because of formulaic restructuring at the federal
level, Minnesota will receive substantially less
federal funding. Eugene Hickock, Undersecretary
of USDOE 4/14/04
24What the cumulative effects of this decade have
meant to public schools
- Less administrationRD
- Greater reliance on local levies
- Fewer Art/Music programs
- Fewer Gifted/Talented programs
- Books older than the kids
- Cutting or charging for transportation
- Higher fees
- Larger class sizes
- Fewer enrichment programs
- Fewer intervention programs
- Deferring maintenance to facilities
- Greater reliance on parent fund raising
- Greater reliance on the classroom teacher
- Fewer fund balances higher cost for districts to
borrow money
25What was happening with the economy
- Between 1995 and 2001 the state of Minnesota and
the federal government experienced the largest
surpluses ever recorded - Minnesota rose to rank 8th in per capita income
of the fifty states - Residents received tax rebate checks in multiple
years - Property tax reductions were enacted over
multiple years - Business tax rates were reformed
-
26-
- What Do We Need to Do to Change Where We are
Headed?
27 Know your Facts
- Schools have had greater expectations placed on
them with flat or decreased funding - Policies that aided property tax reform have
destabilized funding for schools - The state took on the liability of providing 85
of the funding for schools without identifying a
revenue stream - The No New Tax Pledge has created a greater
dependence on fees and increased local taxes.
28Make the case
- Taxes are not out of control.
- The State crises wasnt inherited, it was
selfinflicted - State funding for K-12 was protected only for
this year. - State funding for K-12 education actually
declines for the next three years, for the first
time in the history of the state. - 85 of school funding is regulated by the state.
You cant use fees to support these basic
services. - Few local reserves are surplus. School
districts often have to borrow throughout the
year. - John Gunyou, Commissioner of Finance for Gov.
Carlson and - Jay Kiedrowski, Commissioner of Finance for
Gov. Perpich
29 Work for What you believe in
- Organize Candidate Forums
- Work for Representatives that support your
priorities - Elect representatives whose judgment and
integrity you trust - Help elected officials understand your views
- Take your candidates and representatives on tours
of your schools - Keep public schools in the forefront
- start a letter to the editor campaign
- help parents be a presence at the Capitol
30Concentrate on expanding the conversation
- Local Chambers of Commerce
- Early Childhood parents
- League of Women Voters
- Seniors
- Realtors
- Local Business people
- Legislators
31The Power of the Network
- Together we can
- provide information
- provide a speaker or help you be a speaker
- provide a state view to your local and a local
view to our state - network local advocacy groups
- connect with state-wide advocacy organizations
- present a state-wide parent voice for our public
schools
32- What the best parents want for their children
the public must want for all children - --- Dewey