RI s Education Funding Formula. Introduction and Its Impact on Cumberland Students 02/04/2014



Similar documents
CHAPTER The Education Equity and Property Tax Relief Act 1

TENNESSEE BASIC EDUCATION PROGRAM 2.0

Essential Programs & Services State Calculation for Funding Public Education (ED279):

VIRGINIA. Description of the Formula

PROPOSED FY MINIMUM FOUNDATION PROGRAM FORMULA

Before statehood public education needs were priority- Note: State of Franklin- Education important with sums paid by the public.

Financial Landscape. Oceanside Union Free School District October 14, 2014

The costs of charter and cyber charter schools. Research and policy implications for Pennsylvania school districts. Updated January 2014

Planning a NCLB Title VA Program ODE April 2007

Uniform Chart of Accounts Frequently Asked Questions Data and Reporting

Provisions Related to Children With Disabilities Enrolled by Their Parents in Private Schools. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)

Components 127th General Assembly 128th General Assembly

Understanding Senate Bill

School Finance 101. MASA / MASE Spring Conference Joel Sutter Ehlers Greg Crowe - Ehlers

SCHOOL FUNDING COMPLETE RESOURCE

Issue Brief. Illinois School Funding Formula and General State Aid. August 2006

STATE SPECIAL EDUCATION FUNDING CHANGES: FY FY 2016

REPORT TO THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION OF THE LOUISIANA LEGISLATURE

Rider Comparison Packet General Appropriations Bill

Summary of Significant Spending and Fiscal Rules in the Every Student Succeeds Act

The NEVADA PLAN For School Finance An Overview

Title III, Part A English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and Academic Achievement Act

Financing Education In Minnesota A Publication of the Minnesota House of Representatives Fiscal Analysis Department

Assembly Bill No. 1 Committee of the Whole THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEMBLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

ACHIEVED! (NOT YET) (NOT YET) (NOT YET) (NOT YET)

MISSOURI. Gerri Ogle Coordinator, School Administrative Services Department of Elementary and Secondary Education I. GENERAL BACKGROUND.

Private Schools/Equitable Participation

ACCOUNTING SYSTEM AND PERSONNEL REPORTING. Overview. The Components of the System 9/22/2015. Accounting System and Personnel Reporting 1

Michigan Department of Education Office of Field Services Section 31a Program for At-Risk Pupils Allowable Uses of Funds

Supplement, Not Supplant Handbook A Guide for Grants Administered by the Texas Education Agency

Characteristics of Public and Private Elementary and Secondary School Teachers in the United States:

GLOSSARY OF TERMS. BUILDING MANAGER Non-certified persons hired by the school district to manage and oversee the operation of a school.

WAYLAND PUBLIC SCHOOLS Wayland, Massachusetts

VENDOR QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS FOR RFP Req# BUDGET DEVELOPMENT SOFTWARE

TITLE IX, PART E UNIFORM PROVISIONS SUBPART 1 PRIVATE SCHOOLS. Non-Regulatory Guidance

KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF SCHOOL BOARDS 1420 SW Arrowhead Road, Topeka, Kan

TK EXPANSION PLAN GOALS. The short and long-term goals of the TK Expansion Project are to:

Allowable Costs for IDEA Coordinated Early Intervening Services (CEIS)

CERTIFICATION OF ENROLLMENT ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL nd Legislature st Special Session

ENROLLED SENATE BILL No. 619

Governor Snyder s FY2016 Education & School Aid Budget Recommendations

NEW PHILADELPHIA CITY SCHOOLS FIVE-YEAR FORECAST

INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION IMPROVEMENT ACT PART B (IDEA 0F 2004) GUIDELINES

9. Compensatory Education Guidelines, Financial Accounting Treatment, and an Auditing and Reporting System. Update 14

PRELIMINARY BUDGET HANDBOOK

Transfer and assumeation of the Public Education Office

FAQ for Section 21f of the State School Aid Act

Department of Legislative Services Maryland General Assembly 2015 Session

Program: Teacher Retirement (0170)

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2015 HOUSE BILL 1080 RATIFIED BILL AN ACT TO ESTABLISH THE ACHIEVEMENT SCHOOL DISTRICT.

CONNECTICUT STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Hartford

ILLINOIS SCHOOL REPORT CARD

Legislative Position. Texas Elementary Principals and Supervisors Association

EDUCATION AUDIT APPEALS PANEL REGULATIONS FOR AUDITS OF CHARTER SCHOOLS CALIFORNIA CODE OF REGULATIONS

AN ACT CONCERNING VARIOUS REVISIONS AND ADDITIONS TO THE EDUCATION STATUTES.

Transcription:

RI s Education Funding Formula Introduction and Its Impact on Cumberland Students 02/04/2014

Overview of the Funding Formula & Basic Education Plan (BEP) Enacted in June 2010 Regulations developed by the Board of Regents establishing basic funding standards for the RI public education system Requires that student learning be the primary reference point for decision making, responsive policy development, resource allocation, and personnel assignment and evaluation Takes into consideration what is needed to educate a child effectively in Rhode Island Ensures funds are distributed in a way that is consistent and transparent 2/6/2014 2

What if the State Funding Formula was Fully Funded in Cumberland? Funding Formula State and Local Share Calculations + Non-BEP Expenses (If Fully Funded by both State and Town) $20,495,659 $17,960,214 $26,385,993 Calculated State Share for BEP Calculated Local Share for BEP Non-BEP Expenses Total: $64,841,866 2/6/2014 3

How is the State Funding Formula currently funded? Cumberland Funding Formula Actual State and Local Share Contributions+ Non-BEP Expenses State Actual - BEP $20,495,659 $14,705,457 Local Actual - BEP $18,194,914 Non-BEP Expenses Total: $53,396,030 2/6/2014 4

What is the FY14 BEP Funding Gap? State & Local Gap from the Funding Formula -$8,191,079 -$3,254,757 Present State Gap Town BEP Gap Total: $11,445,835 2/6/2014 5

What are the Key Components of the State Funding Formula? 1. Core Instruction amount that funds student instructional needs as described in the BEP 2. Student Success Factor (SSF) that provides additional funding to support Free/Reduce Priced Lunch (FRPL) student needs; with the goal of closing achievement gaps 3. State Share Ratio (SSR) that considers a district s revenue generating capacity, taking into account property values, median family income, and the concentration of at-risk students Source http://www.ride.ri.gov/portals/0/uploads/documents/funding-and-finance-wise-investments/funding-sources/state- Education-Aid-Funding-Formula/FAQ-Updated-42011.pdf 2/6/2014 6

1) Core Instruction Amount per State Formula FY12 FY13 FY14 $8333 / student $8679 / student $8897 / student Number of Cumberland Students FY 14: 4,562 State Funding before Student Success Factor: $8,897 x 4,562 = $40,588,114 2/6/2014 7

2) Student Success Factor (SSF) Provides additional funding to support FRPL student needs SSF = Core Instruction Amount * 40% * (#FRPL Students) Number of FRPL Students in Cumberland FY12 = 948 Students FY13= 1,007 Students FY14= 1,056 Students SSF FY 14 = $8,897 * 40% * 1,056 = $3,758,093 2/6/2014 8

Total Core Instruction Amount to Fund the FY14 BEP BEP Funding = Core Amount + SSF Core Amount: $40,588,114 + SSF: $3,758,093 BEP Total: $44,346,207 Amount to fund Cumberland s Basic Education Program per State requirements 2/6/2014 9

3) State Share Ratio State share ratio considers a district s revenue generating capacity Takes into account property values, median family income, and the concentration of at-risk students State s Share of BEP is 40.5% Cumberland s Share of BEP is 59.5% State s Share of BEP for other Rhode Island towns for comparison Cumberland Woonsocket Lincoln N.K. 40.5% ~86.2% 39.2% 29.3% 2/6/2014 10

3) State Share Ratio, con t The State is supposed to provide 40.5%* of the funding formula money to Cumberland. $44,346,207 x 40.5% = $17,960,214 Actual FY14 State Aid : $14,705,457 State Share of BEP Gap: $3,254,757 *Cumberland is an underfunded district based on state analysis. A funding strategy has been established to fully fund the State Share over 7 years (by FY 2018). Annual State increase for Cumberland students to meet the BEP by 2018: ~$699,000 2/6/2014 11

Cumberland s Current School Contribution FY14 Town Contribution : $38,690,573 Non BEP Obligations (FY14*) $20,495,659 Amount remaining for BEP $18,194,914 *Note: FY2010 Non-BEP Expenses were $16,269,374, FY2013 Non-BEP Expenses were 18,730,232. Projected Non-BEP costs for FY2014 are ~$20,495,659 2/6/2014 12

Cumberland s BEP Share per State Cumberland is supposed to provide 59.5% of the funding formula money to Cumberland Students. $44,346,207 x 59.5% = $26,385,993 Effective Cumberland Share: $18,194,914 Cumberland Share of BEP Gap: $8,191,079 2/6/2014 13

Total Funding Gap for FY 14 Total Annual Per Student Gap: $11,445,835 / ~4,562 = $2,509/student Apportioned Annual Per Student Gap : State: $3,254,757 or $713/student Town $8,191,079 or $1,796/student 2/6/2014 14

Why are we having this conversation? 2/6/2014 15

Need to Close the Total Funding Gap! State is addressing their share of BEP underfunding by increasing aid through 2018 What can the Town and School Department do? Decrease Non-BEP costs Increase Tax Revenue 2/6/2014 16

Need to Close the Total Funding Gap! Where can Non-BEP costs be reduced? Top-6 categories make up 98% of Non BEP budget: Charter Tuition, Special Ed Tuition, Out-of-District Transportation (24.4%) Teacher Retirements (21.8%) Utilities and Building Upkeep and Maintenance (21.2%) Federally subsidized Expenditures (10.9%) In-District Transportation (10.6%) Food Service (8.8%) Can we increase Tax Revenue? 2014 Town Budget is $86,039,434 State has set limit for year-over-year tax increase at 4% Town also has lower limit for year-over-year tax increase Even at state limit, additional tax revenue only $1.5M 2/6/2014 17

Strategies Develop long range funding strategy like State solution with planned increase to meet BEP obligations Prioritize funding toward BEP costs first, non-bep costs second Plan for financial impact of charter school expansion Create a funding strategy (long range) that can equitably support two existing school districts Complete a gap analysis similar to N. Smithfield; identify measureable timelines and funding strategies to close gap with each budget cycle Evaluate state laws/regulations & town ordinances for cost saving opportunities 2/6/2014 18

Next Steps Develop 10 year projections for: Top-6 Non-BEP budget items District student and FRPL enrollments Charter school enrollments State funding based on funding formula Town budget Review Top-6 for ways to limit increases Contract reviews State mandate reviews Determine realistic plan to increase Tax revenue to close Town funding shortage Review existing tax caps at both state and local level 2/6/2014 19

Sources http://www.ride.ri.gov/portals/0/uploads/documents/funding-and-finance-wise- Investments/Funding-Sources/State-Education-Aid-Funding-Formula/FY-2014- Calculations-for-the-Web.pdf http://www.ride.ri.gov/portals/0/uploads/documents/funding-and-finance-wise- Investments/Funding-Sources/State-Education-Aid-Funding-Formula/FAQ- Updated-42011.pdf http://www.americanprogress.org/wpcontent/uploads/issues/2011/08/pdf/rhode_island_reform.pdf http://www.ride.ri.gov/portals/0/uploads/documents/funding-and-finance-wise- Investments/Funding-Sources/State-Education-Aid-Funding-Formula/Core- Instruction-Supporting-Detail.pdf 2/6/2014 20

Appendix 2/6/2014 21

1) Core Instruction Amount Established annually as the amount that adequately funds the BEP Based on best practice cost studies from states deemed to have the best practice financial models Focused on student achievement Funded from state and local resources 2/6/2014 22

What does the funding formula cover? Focused on student achievement Accounts for costs having the greatest impact on a child s ability to learn Instructional supplies Textbooks and equipment Curriculum development Professional development Salaries (teachers, aides, counselors, librarians) Administration and administrative support A portion of benefits 2/6/2014 23

What doesn t the funding formula cover? Costs determined to be controlled at the local level or funded by other means Retiree healthcare Pension Charter School Tuition Transportation Out of district transportation Utilities Building maintenance Food Service Capital projects Non-public textbooks Administrative office supplies Total $18,730,231 using FY13 Non-BEP Actuals 2/6/2014 24

What s Not Covered by the Funding Formula in Cumberland (FY 13 Expenses) Expenses not allowed in BEP calculation: Cost Bldg. Upkeep, Utilities, & Maintenance -$4,079,015.64 Charter Tuition, Special Ed Tuition & Out of District Transportation -$3,961,829.02 Total Cost of Teacher Retirement -$3,934,908.33 Transportation In-District -$2,270,487.05 Expenditures Funded by Federal Funds -$2,232,117.68 Food Service -$1,781,332.82 Retiree Benefits (Net of Cash Receipts) -$217,381.65 Safety -$203,209.66 Dues & Fees for Professional Organizations -$37,051.85 Non-Public Textbooks -$10,362.20 School Admin. Office Supplies, etc. -$2,394.51 Miscellaneous Expense -$141.11 Consultants $0.00 Admin. Staff in Service training $0.00 Group Home Aid $0.00 Enterprise Fund Activity $0.00 Unallowable Expenses in BEP calculation -$18,730,231.52 2/6/2014 For Reference: 2010 Non-BEP Expenses $16,269,374 25

What if the Local Share is level funded for FY15? We remain out of compliance for the BEP. District will be forced to limit student achievementfocused programs. Charter school tuition increases ~$418 for every student presently attending (418 students) based on RIDE Transition Plan an additional $174,724 in FY15 Projected enrollment increase of Charter School students additional cost of $278,920 Projected increases in other non-bep expenses Presently, expenses above (and all other non BEP expenses) are budgeted first. Remaining amount reconciled for instruction (BEP). This is backwards! 2/6/2014 26

2/6/2014 Impact of Ignoring the Local Funding Gap Increasing Non-BEP costs erode instructional $ (i.e., Transportation trumps instruction) Common Core priorities cannot be addressed Programs are stripped to bare bones Limits the RTI support for struggling students High-end learners remain largely underserved Out of date textbooks & technology remain Substantially limits program expansion such as music, arts & STEM Limits technology replacement & expansion Increasing ESL needs reprioritize spending Limited ability to address staffing issues Middle school librarian Middle school secretaries Technology assistants 27

Are there Communities that are Adequately Funded? Lincoln Local Appropriation $39,663,090 ~3300 RADM Students Cumberland : $38,690,573 ~4562 RADM Students 2/6/2014 28

What Does RIGL Say? 16-7-24 Minimum appropriation by a community for approved school expenses. Each community shall appropriate or otherwise make available to the school committee for approved school expenditures during each school year, to be expended under the direction and supervision of the school committee of that community, an amount, which, together with state education aid and federal aid: (1) shall be not less than the costs of the basic program during the reference year, (2) plus the costs in the reference year of all optional programs shared by the state; provided, however, that the state funds provided in accordance with 16-5- 31 shall not be used to supplant local funds. The board of regents for elementary and secondary education shall adopt regulations for determining the basic education program and the maintenance of local appropriation to support the basic education program. A community that has a local appropriation insufficient to fund the basic education program pursuant to the regulations described in this section and all other approved programs shared by the state and required in law shall be required to increase its local appropriation in accordance with 44-5-2 or find efficiencies in other non-education programs to provide sufficient funding to support the public schools. The city of Central Falls annual local contribution to education shall be determined pursuant to subsection 16-7.2-6(d). 2/6/2014 29

What Does RIGL Say? (con t) 16-7.2-3 Permanent foundation education aid established. (a) Beginning in the 2012 fiscal year, the following foundation education aid formula shall take effect. The foundation education aid for each district shall be the sum of the core instruction amount in (a)(1) and the amount to support high need students in (a)(2), which shall be multiplied by the district state share ratio calculated pursuant to 16-7.2-4 to determine the foundation aid. (1) The core instruction amount shall be an amount equal to a statewide per pupil core instruction amount as established by the department of elementary and secondary education, derived from the average of northeast regional expenditure data for the states of Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) that will adequately fund the student instructional needs as described in the basic education program and multiplied by the district average daily membership as defined in 16-7-22. Expenditure data in the following categories: instruction and support services for students, instruction, general administration, school administration and other support services from the National Public Education Financial Survey as published by NCES and enrollment data from the Common Core of Data also published by NCES will be used when determining the core instruction amount. The core instruction amount will be updated annually. For the purpose of calculating this formula, school districts' resident average daily membership shall exclude charter school and state-operated school students. (2) The amount to support high need students beyond the core instruction amount shall be determined by multiplying a student success factor of forty percent (40%) by the core instruction per pupil amount described in 16-7.2-3(1) and applying that amount to all resident children eligible for USDA reimbursable school meals. (b) LEAs may set aside a portion of funds received under subsection (a) to expand learning opportunities such as after school and summer programs, full day kindergarten and/or multiple pathway programs provided that the basic education program and all other approved programs required in law are funded. 2/6/2014 30