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Chapter 9 The Structure of School Finance Systems

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Title: Chapter 9 The Structure of School Finance Systems


1
Chapter 9 The Structure of School Finance
Systems
2
Education Is a State Responsibility
  • States have the responsibility to plan for and
    deliver a system
  • of free, public education
  • States also have the duty
  • to equalize funding based on the localities
    fiscal capacity to pay for educational programs

3
School Finance Relationships
  • Political
  • Financial
  • Control
  • Direction
  • Whoever funds schools controls its direction
    and practices.

4
Localities Operate Schools
  • Although education is a state function, virtually
    every state, except Hawaii, has delegated the
    school systems operation to the localities
  • The states, for the most part, maintain an
    oversight and compliance role in the local school
    systems operation

5
Consolidation for Efficiency
  • Once local oversight was relegated to
    neighborhood schools and school boards
  • The trend over the last 60-70 years has been to
    decrease the number of school districts in the
    United States
  • This consolidation has made for greater
    efficiency. It has, however, depersonalized to
    some extent schools operation administration

6
Consolidation for Efficiency, cont.
  • Gradually over the 20th century, the states
    assumed more responsibility to oversee education
  • In 1937-38, the first year keeping such
    statistics, the U.S. had 119,001 school districts
  • In 2000-01, the total number of school districts
    totaled 14,859

7
Consolidation for Efficiency, cont.
  • More school districts brought together more
    communities representing a wider geography
    supporting the school
  • While school consolidation may have provided
    greater efficiency, it also negatively impacted
    citizens perceptions of their public school
    ownership
  • In fact, this ownership issue has resulted in
    some calling for replacing school boards with
    local school councils

8
Consolidation for Efficiency, cont.
  • While this trend decreases resource duplication
    and waste, it likewise decreases community
    feelings of pride and investment in their local
    schools

9
Number of Students per School District, 1939-40
and 1999-2000
10
Revenues and Expenditures
  • The federal share of public school revenue has
    increased each decade from less than 1 in 1919
    to a high of 9.8 in 1979

11
 
1959-60
39.1
56.5
1969-70
8.0
52.1
39.9
1979-80 9.8 46.8
43.4
1989-90 6.1 47.1
46.8
12
of Revenue by Source
13
Federal Revenue Sources
  • The New England states have the lowest percentage
    of federal revenue source at 5.3

14
Federal Revenue Sources, cont.
  • The Southeast states, on the other hand, have the
    highest revenue percentage from federal sources
    at 9.1

15
State Revenue Sources
  • The Mid East states have the lowest percentage at
    39.9 while the Far West has the highest
    percentage of state revenue at 61

16
Local Revenue Sources
  • The Far West has the lowest percentage at 30.6
  • Mid East region has the highest percentage of
    local revenue sources at 55.5

17
Local Funding
  • Local funding is at the heart of schools
  • The range in local revenue percentages ranges
    from a low of 12.6 in New Mexico to a high of
    64.9 in Nevada

12.6 Local revenues
64.9 Local revenues
18
Federal Responsibilities
  • 1867 - Congress established the United States
    Department of Education
  • Later downgraded to an Office of Education
  • Became part of the Department of Housing,
    Education, and Welfare.
  • 1980 Reestablished as the Department of
    Education

19
Federal Responsibilities, cont.
  • The federal education functioned primarily
    providing grants guidance for states and school
    systems under various programs
  • Title V of the Elementary and Secondary Education
    Act of 1965 strengthened the State Departments of
    Education by providing funding for increased
    state education personnel as well as for
    training, equipment, research and development

20
State Responsibilities
  • The State Education Agencies (SEAs) are generally
    empowered by the state legislature to coordinate
    and oversee the local education agencies (LEAs)
  • State Boards of Education date back to 1784
  • The first State Superintendent was appointed in
    New York in 1812

21
State Responsibilities, cont.
  • State superintendents have the responsibility for
    providing leadership to the State Department of
    Education and carrying out the duties with which
    the agency has been charged
  • In that process, state superintendents have been
    in the position to become eloquent spokespersons
    for education with the general public and with
    the legislators, as was the case with Horace Mann
  •  

22
State Responsibilities Politics
  • The Governor influences education through their
    campaign platforms, whom they appoint in
    leadership positions once elected, and their
    positions sheer bully pulpit
  • The Department of Education is generally
    responsible for carrying out the states
    education legislation

23
Federal, State, Local Interaction
  • The federal No Child Left Behind legislation of
    2001 focuses on states accountability to meet
    academic standards
  • What takes place at the federal, state, and local
    levels varies depending upon how the grant
    legislation is written

24
Federal, State, Local Funding
  • The Federal Department of Education announces the
    latest authorization of the ABC Act once Congress
    approves the legislation
  • DOE makes legislative details available to the
    public
  • State Education Agencies (SEAs) are authorized to
    submit applications for funding

25
Federal, State, Local Interaction
  • The SEAs make the application process available
    to the Local Education Agencies (LEAs)
  • The SEA usually provides technical assistance to
    the school districts in completing the grant
    application package
  • The grant will usually have a list of assurances
    with which the local school district must comply
    to obtain the funds

26
Federal, State, Local Funding
  • The SEA collects LEA grant applications assures
    the Federal Department of Education that they
    have met grant provisions
  • The Federal Department of Education reviews
    applications and awards grants to the states
  • The SEA, in turn, is allowed to take a
    percentage of the grant for administration and
    divides remaining funds to the localities
  • Occasionally, the states audits local funds and
    the federal office audits state funds.

27
Advantages of Layered School Financing
  1. Equalization due to fiscal capacity of the states
    and the localities
  2. Equitable adequate distribution of educational
    services
  3. Efficient provision of educational services
  4. More decentralized decision-making authority to
    meet the states and localities needs

28
1st Advantage of Layered School Financing
  • Some school districts lack the local capacity to
    raise revenue and require a larger level of
    government to spread the fiscal effort over a
    larger base
  • The poor locality can draw on outside resources
  • The resources available at the smallest level of
    government, therefore, do not determine the
    quality of education

29
2nd Advantage of Layered School Financing
  • States can determine what level of adequate
    services will be mandated and at what levels this
    will occur
  • With the increased layers of government and
    funding that come from a broader tax base, states
    can devise different approaches to meeting needs
    within the state

30
3rd Advantage of Layered School Financing
  • In the multiple layered approach to providing
    services, the state or the federal government may
    use its influence to consolidate school
    operations or the services delivery within school
    districts
  • By encouraging efficiency, schools reap the
    economic and instructional benefits of increasing
    the achievement impact at a lower cost

31
4th Advantage of Layered School Financing
  • Allowing individuals the opportunity to select
    the services that match what they feel they need
    and want is a powerful psychological phenomenon
    that ties the all three prior advantages together
  • Communities tend to coalesce around areas that
    offer public services matching their personal
    preferences

32
Advantages to Layered School Financing
  • With fiscal layering funding, the interplay
    of the federal, state, and local services
    provides distinct advantages for individuals to
    select the type of environment in which they wish
    to live and what services are important to them.

33
Local Equalization
  • Usually, the local level does little to equalize
    for funding
  • Studies show that, within the same school
    district, schools in wealthier locations receive
    a greater funding share than poorer schools
  • School demographic, achievement, other data
    make it necessary to fund schools based on their
    individual needs for meeting district goals

34
State Equalization
  • States have a responsibility to equalize funding
    based on the localities capacity to pay for
    services
  • States use a formula to determine how the
    equalized funds are determined
  • These formulae vary in complexity and
    effectiveness

35
1st - States Determine the Floor Level of
Educational Services
  • This is a basic, no frills level of services
    and not what most educators would consider as a
    program that meets everyones needs
  • This floor level funding of services usually
    consists of computing a dollar figure for
    professional education positions for a given
    number of students, technology, special
    weightings for students, and the like
  • What states consider in this floor level of
    services varies

36
2nd - State Determines the Localities Fiscal
Capacity
  • States use a wide variety of factors in
    determining this wealth formula
  • Every state uses a different formula
  • Usually, property values, income tax, and an
    estimate of locally generated business revenue
    become a proxy for determining the localitys
    ability to fund services
  • Designing a workable funding formula becomes an
    increasingly difficult process

37
  • Urban locations with a large business and
    industry tax bases tend to have more, different,
    and much more expensive social, economic,
    educational problems than suburban or rural
    locations with fewer business and industry

38
  • Rural areas have problems that other areas do not
    have, including isolation, difficulty attracting
    teachers, and too few students to afford many
    high quality educational offerings

39
Coming to Consensus
  • Coming to a consensus on community values for
    educational results, the relative weighing of
    various factors associated with wealth, and the
    weighing the varying needs within a state can
    tax even the brightest and most eloquent
    politicians

40
3rd State Must Decide the Basis for
Distributing Funds
  • Some states believe that the poorest localities
    should pay nothing towards the floor level of
    educational services
  • Instead, they believe the wealthiest localities
    should pay the entire cost of providing these
    basic services
  • Other states believe that every locality should
    pay something towards the cost of providing these
    basic services

41
An ExampleEqualization in Virginia
  • The poorest localities have a composite index of
    .2 and the richest have a composite index of .8
  • A poor locality with a .2 composite index would
    be required to raise 20 of the funding for the
    Standards of Quality through local sources with
    the state funding 80
  • A mid-range locality with a composite index of .5
    would fund 50 of the Standards of Quality with
    local funds and 50 state funds
  • A wealthy locality with a composite index of .8
    would fund 80 of the Standards of Quality with
    the state paying only 20

42
Current School Finance Structures
  • Forward-thinking individuals who saw the need for
    equalizing school funding, had the ability to
    sell their new ideas to progressive states and
    localities
  • These pioneers included Ellwood Cubberley, Robert
    Haig, Henry Morrison, Paul Mort, George Strayer,
    and Harlan Undegraff

43
The Next School Finance Leaders
  • A 2nd generation of school finance scholars,
    including Roe Johns and Edgar Morphet (around
    1940), refined and extended the effort to
    establish state equalization formulae throughout
    the country

44
The Next School Finance Leaders, cont.
  • The 3rd generation of school finance scholars
    (late 1970s through today) include Kern
    Alexander, Richard Salmon, Allan Odden, Lawrence
    Piccus, and others
  • They keep working to implement the democratic
    ideals at the most basic level of education its
    financing

45
Current U.S. State School Finance Systems
  • Flat grants
  • Foundation plans
  • District power equalizing
  • Full state funding

46
Flat Grants
  • This program distributes state aid to localities
    based on a flat amount of money on a per-pupil
    basis or on a defined personnel basis (funding x
    number of teachers for y number of students)
  • It does not factor in student attendance or how
    much additional funding the locality is able to
    raise independently above and beyond the flat
    grant

47
Flat Grants Model
  • Amount of state aid per pupil
  • Total State Revenue
  • Number of Pupils in the State

48
Example of Flat Grants
School District Local Revenue Flat Grant Flat Grant of Total Total Spending
A 1,000 1,000 50 2,000
B 4,000 1,000 20 5,000
C 7,000 1,000 12.5 8,000
D 9,000 1,000 10 10,000
E 11,500 1,000 8 12,500
49
Flat Grant Comparison
  • In School District A, the state provides 50 of
    the total per pupil expenditure or a 100 match
    to what the locality can afford to pay
  • In School District E, the state provides only 8
    of the localitys total expenditure
  • While this model does have a large age impact on
    the poorest localities, it does very little to
    equalize revenue
  • School District E spends more than six times what
    School District A spends on a per pupil basis

50
Flat Grants Advantages
  • It can be used in conjunction
  • with other models
  • Every district receives a uniform per student
    appropriation. Wealthier localities can
    supplement
  • If the state provides sufficient funding in the
    flat grant for a truly adequate level of
    education, certain advantages exist for poorer
    localities

51
Flat Grants Disadvantages
  • Little provision for equalizing funding across
    the state because the grants are not based on the
    districts wealth
  • Unrelated to fiscal capacity, and unrelated to
    effort
  • Assumes, wrongly, that the grant is sufficient to
    cover adequate education costs expected within
    the state

52
Foundation Plans
  • Most states use some type of a foundation plan
  • The concept affirms that the state has a
    responsibility an interest in providing a
    minimum level of education
  • The foundation program holds that the minimum
    education level can be costed-out, or financially
    apportioned in a rational manner

53
Foundation Plans, cont.
  • A foundation program requires that a state
    establish a minimum local tax rate and a minimum
    education spending level for school districts in
    the state
  • This minimum spending level is known as the
    foundation amount

54
Foundation Plans, cont.
  • This minimum tax rate may or may not produce a
    sufficient tax yield to meet the minimum spending
    level
  • The state aid makes up any shortfall in the
    required tax rate or yield and the spending level
    (the foundation amount)
  • Localities can tax at higher rates than the state
    prescribes and provide even higher levels of
    education services

55
Foundation Plans Formula
  • State Funding Guarantee of Pupils X
    Guarantee of Plan (constant)
  • Local Share Required Local Tax Rate (constant)
    X Local Assessed Valuation
  • State Aid Total Foundation Guarantee Local
    Share

56
Calculation Foundation Funding
School District Local Required Effort Per Pupil Equalized Property Value times 10 mills State Share Guaranteed Foundation minus Required Local Effort
A 100,000 x 0.010 1,000 5,000 - 1,000 4,000
B 200,000 x 0.010 2,000 5,000 - 2,000 3,000
C 250,000 x 0.010 2,500 5,000 - 2,500 2,500
D 300,000 x 0.010 3,000 5,000 - 3,000 2,000
E 400,000 x 0.010 4,000 5,000 - 4,000 1,000
57
  • School District A (low capacity) has a per pupil
    property value of 100,000. If the constant
    required local effort is 10 mills, the School
    District A must come up with 1,000 of the
    foundation level of per pupil spending of 5,000.
    The state share will then be 4,000.
  • School District E (high capacity) has 400,000 of
    equalized property value per student. This
    property value taxed at the required minimum of
    10 mills produces revenue of 4,000 per pupil
    they must pay to meet the foundation level. The
    states share for School District E will be
    1,000 per pupil.

58
Foundation Program Allows Local Leeway
  • Localities can raise more than the foundation
    figure
  • For the next example, let us assume that School
    District A cannot afford to raise additional
    revenue while School District E can afford to
    raise an additional 1,000 per student

59
Summary of Foundation Formula
School District Local Required Effort State Share Foundation Level Spending Leeway Funding Total Per Pupil Spending
A 1,000 4,000 5,000 0 5,000
B 2,000 3,000 5,000 100 5,100
C 2,500 2,500 5,000 250 5,250
D 3,000 2,000 5,000 500 5,500
E 4,000 1,000 5,000 1,000 6,000
60
  • The equalization impact becomes obvious comparing
    the foundation plan with the flat grant model
  • The local share for district with the least
    capacity, A, is only 20 of the foundation
    amount. The local share for the wealthiest
    district, E, is 80 of the foundation level
  • Obviously, leeway funds are allowed, which in
    this example, provide School District E with 20
    greater per pupil funding than with School
    District A

61
Foundation Plan Advantages
  • Equalizing impact towards a state-established
    minimum foundation level as poorer districts tend
    to receive more state funding
  • Minimum levels of locally-raised revenue
    requirements (taxation and spending levels) for
    the required local effort
  • Allows additional spending (local leeway)

62
Foundation Plan Disadvantages
  • Foundation level may be set too low to support a
    realistic education plan
  • Minimum level must be adjusted periodically to
    reflect practice cost changes
  • Fails to overcome the significant variances that
    exist in local capacity to raise revenue
  • Uses local fiscal capacity, not local effort as
    the variable for equalizing funding
  • Minimalist not adequate or quality education
    program

63
District Power Equalizing
  • District power equalizing (DPE) is virtually the
    same as
  • Guaranteed tax yield (GTY)
  • and
  • Guaranteed tax base (GTB) programs

64
DPE Model Concepts
  1. The ability to generate revenue should be
    equalized among the districts in the state. The
    locality should determine how much.

65
DPE Model Concepts, cont.
  1. Local variance in fiscal capacity is neutralized.
    Education quality is a function of state not
    local wealth. An equal yield for an equal
    effort.

66
DPE Model Concepts, cont.
  • 3. The state either establishes a schedule of tax
    rates that guarantee a given amount per pupil for
    the locality or the state provides a guaranteed
    tax base per pupil across the state for the
    localities.

67
District Power Equalization Formula
  • State Aid
  • Local Tax Rate X
  • Guaranteed Yield
  • (Local Assessed Valuation X Local Tax
    Rate).

68
District Power Equalization Formula Example
  • Example
  • (Equivalent to a 100,000 Guaranteed Tax Base) 
  • Guaranteed
  • Tax Rate Revenue Yield
  • 5 mills 500
  • 10 mills 1,000
  • 15 mills 1,500
  • 20 mills 2,000

69
Calculation of District Power Equalization
School District Fiscal Capacity per Pupil Mill Rate Imposed by Locality Local Amount Generated State Aid Total Per Pupil Spending
A 40,000 8 320 3,680 4,000
B 40,000 9 360 4,140 4,500
C 100,000 10 1,000 4,000 5000
D 150,000 9 1,350 3,150 4,500
E 300,000 8 2,400 1,600 4,000
70
In the DPE Program
  • There is no single foundation level
  • The districts are free to set their own mill rate
  • Those districts electing to establish the mill
    rate at the maximum by the state qualify for the
    maximum per pupil funding
  • Those electing a lower mill rate qualify for
    reduced per pupil funding

71
Comparison of DPE Foundation Programs
  • DPE Programs
  • No required local effort
  • Establishes minimum guarantee of revenue per
    pupil per mill of taxation for equalized property
    value
  • Locality can tax for leeway funds
  • Equalize for local capacity
  • Foundation Programs
  • Required local effort
  • Establishes minimum per pupil spending levels
    based on required mill rate per equalized
    property value
  • Locality can tax for leeway funds
  • Equalize for local capacity

72
DPE Model Advantages
  1. DPE tends to equalize for the ability to pay for
    education (not on spending, however). There is
    also a recapture provision for the state,
    sometimes called negative state aid. This
    allows the local school districts above some
    determined level of fiscal capacity to levy a
    minimum local tax and return a portion of the tax
    yield to localities with lower fiscal capacity.

73
DPE Model Advantages, cont.
  • 2. It allows for the locality to set its spending
    level.
  • 3. It provides for taxpayer equity allowing an
    equal yield for an equal effort.
  • 4. To some degree, the model keeps property
    values equal through the aid formula.
  •  

74
DPE Model Disadvantages
  • This model does not equalize for per pupil
    expenditures because the local districts have the
    autonomy to determine spending levels.
  • If a wealthy locality exceeds the guarantee, a
    recapture of funds goes back to the state to help
    poorer localities. This serves as a disincentive
    for localities to exceed the guarantee.
  • A locality loses a degree of autonomy because the
    state may establish minimums and maximums.

75
 Full State Funding
  • The state collects all funding and is fully
    responsible for financing public education
  • State distributes funds to schools on an equal
    basis
  • Localities cannot supplement the state funding
    with locally-generated revenue
  • This model eliminates disparities and differences
    in funding the operation of schools

76
 Full State Funding Formula
  • State Aid Total Education Spending
  • Number of Pupils in the State

77
Comparison with Flat Grant Model
  • Flat Grant Model
  • Provides only the floor funding for school
    districts
  • Allows for differences in spending
  • Does not imply that this is all the funding
    available to schools
  • Full State Funding Model
  • Provides the ceiling of funding for the schools
  • Allows only for the equal state funds for
    education
  • This is all the funding available to public
    education

78
Advantages to Full State Funding
  • First, education is a state function and this
    model places the financial burden of paying for
    education squarely on the state
  • Second, this model does eliminate all spending
    variance for schools and appears to be fair to
    taxpayers and students by NOT making school
    funding a factor of local wealth or poverty

79
Advantages to Full State Funding, cont.
  • Third, state funding virtually eliminates local
    property taxes to fund education
  • Finally, reduced overhead costs occur as the
    state takes over much control of schools from
    local superintendents, central office staff
    members, and school boards

80
Advantages to Full State Funding, cont.
  • Additionally, with local politics and fighting
    for local funding out of the way, more time may
    be allowed for curriculum, instruction, and
    professional development

81
Disadvantages to Full State Funding
  • Reduces the appearance of local control.
    Citizens may feel that they have little or no
    impact on the large state operation of schools.
  • Minimizes the appearance of local fiscal control.
    Wealthy areas may think their schools are not
    receiving sufficient funding. Poorer communities
    may not feel as if they have any investment in
    the schools.

82
Disadvantages to Full State Funding, cont.
  • The state aid may not reflect schools diverse
    needs. Equal funding for a school with 5 of its
    students receiving special education services
    versus 20 of its students in special education
    programs may not provide what is actually needed.
  • Finally, the state-set spending may not be
    sufficient to meet the needs of the entire
    educational system.

83
  • As Deborah Verstegan states,
  • There have been no new approaches developed or
    used to distribute state aid to school systems
    since the 1920s and 1930s.

84
  • In that time frame, fewer than one third of the
    eligible population attended high school much
    less graduated. As late as 1950, only about one
    third of the population graduated from high
    school. The graduation rate for black males was
    12.6 and 14.7 for black females.

85
  • Today, student performance accountability
    programs expect all students to achieve to high
    levels. Under the NCLB legislation, all
    sub-groups must make Adequate Yearly Progress.
  • Nevertheless, our funding formulae to meet
    these expectations have not changed. The older
    funding models assumed a minimum education and
    not the high quality, high stakes testing
    programs that exist today.

86
Need for EducationFinance Reform
Economic competitiveness in a global marketplace
sustainability of our Social Security
Medicare Programs require that all U.S. students
receive an ADEQUATE not minimum education.
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