Title: Revolution and Evolution: Michigan
1Revolution and Evolution Michigans Proposal A
School Finance Reform, A Retrospective Analysis
- Michael F. Addonizio
- Douglas C. Drake
- September 29, 2005
2Proposal A Goals
- Reduce, but not eliminate per pupil gaps
- Reduce cap property tax for operations
- Reduce local share of operations costs
- Increase state funds and state share
- Provide greater stability in funding
3Measuring As Success
- Clear reduction in per pupil gaps
- Property taxes clearly reduced limited
- Major change in state / local share
- Clear shift to state financing
- Improved stability less clear and may depend on
perspective
4The Issue of Per Pupil Gaps
- Overall dramatic reduction in gap, but not
elimination - Basic foundation of 6700 (2005) higher than
maximum guarantee in 1995 - Statistical measures of equity all show dramatic
improvements (Table 4)
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6Revenue Growth and Adequacy
- When looked at from perspective of total state
and local revenues - Revenues Before and After comfortably above
inflation in most years - Period of comparison seems to make a lot of
difference v structure of change
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9Strong Growth in Total Revenues
- Total revenue growth beat inflation most years
- 15 years Before A
- Average annual nominal growth 6.4
- Average annual real growth 1.6
- Standard deviation 3.0
- 9 years Before A
- Average annual nominal growth 6.4
- Average annual real growth 2.6
- Standard deviation 1.7
- 9 years after A
- Average annual nominal growth 5.1
- Average annual real growth 2.3
- Standard deviation 3.1
10Significant Increase In State Funds
- Proposal A tax increases largely effective 5-1-94
- Added state revenues in FY 1993-94, and FY
1994-95the first year of Proposal A
implementation
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12Improved Finances for Most Traditional Districts
- Significant and dramatic increases in fund
balances for most traditional districts - Sources a combination of extra-formula foundation
increases, pension re-financing, Durant
settlement, enrollment growth and district
management practices
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16Enrollment Patterns Now Most Critical Finance
Issue
- Growing enrollment usually results in good fiscal
health - Declining enrollment often results in fiscal
problems - Majority of districts and pupils now in decline
status - Very few districts are steady growers
- See Appendix Q for district detail
17Enrollment Patterns, cont
- Declining enrollment not just an urban issue
- Significant declines in rural and small city
/towns/older suburbs
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20Property Tax Reductions
- Millage cuts and homestead exemption produced
dramatic cuts in property taxes for homeowners,
less for business - Average mills cut from 56.64 on all property to
- HOMESTEADS 30.22 - 46.5
- NON-HOMESTEAD 51.00 - 10.0
- Millage cut 5.1 BILLION in 2003, and 35.6
Billion cumulatively through 2003 - Assessment cap 3.1 BILLION in 2003 and 13.1
Billion cumulatively through 2003
21Property Taxes Limited
- The assessment cap critical
- Also limitations on local school options for
operations - Only two ISDs with enhancement mills
- Very few enhancement elections held
- ¾ vote requirement for Legislature to change
millage limits makes significant increases very
unlikely
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24Some thoughts on the Net Impact
- Dramatic property tax cut, as promised
- Rhetoric about loss of homes to property tax has
disappeared - Dramatic reduction of financing equity gap for
operations - Debate now shifting to questions of adequacy
- Stability a relative issue
- No fear of loss of major portion of operating
millagesBUT
25From Equity to Adequacy
- After years of unexpectedly large foundation
increases, years of flat to slightly reduced
foundations - Did over-optimism of late 90s create unrealistic
expectations? - Enactment of numerous tax exemptions that reduced
growth potential of SAF - Replacement funds, largely tobacco are long-term
decliners
26From Equity to Adequacy 2
- Michigan has never addressed school finance in
the context of identifying actual costs - Focus on all-encompassing solutions that tend
to be one-time fixes - Earmarking more income tax in 1997
- Calls for more new taxes and no GF grant
- Assertions that old system was better
- IT WAS GONE, WITH NO GOING BACK
27Challenges
- Capital funding
- Declining enrollment from population decline and
shifts - Impact of charters and choice on traditional
district enrollment - Tax policy and erosion in the revenue base
- Impacts of personnel and fringe
costs-productivity gap
28Capital Funding for K-12
- Proposal A made up-front decision to NOT attempt
capital funding reform - Assumption that dramatic cut in property taxes
would make it easier for some districts to obtain
financing until such time as a solution could be
developed - Data on increased bonding and debt millages
clearly indicates that happened - Now the next challenge
29The Challenge of Declining Enrollment
- Declining enrollment-in a traditional district or
a charter school-virtually guarantees financial
difficulty-very quickly - Its much harder to manage down than to manage
growthsee Appendix Q - Strong consideration needs to be given to change
pupil count to a one year lag
30Tax Policy Changes Impact SAF Revenues
- Legislation did hold SAF harmless from recent
income tax rate cuts (by pushing burden
completely on GFGP) - Legislation has not held SAF harmless from dozens
of base exemptions and other changes that have
added up to hundreds of millions of reduced
income - SAF does not have the same tax base it had in 1994
31The Challenges of Cost Savings
- Education essentially has been a one on one
business for a long time - Where will the productivity come from to bring
costs down? - If productivity improvements arent possible,
what impact will lower or slower growing salaries
and benefits have on attracting the best and
brightest to teaching?
32Conclusions
- The sum of all these circumstances poses a
fundamental and daunting challenge to all
Michiganders. As the national and world
economies continue to shift from muscle power to
brain power, our ability to balance limited
financial resources and growing educational
requirements and needs over the next few years
will play a large role in determining our future.