budgets – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Tue, 14 Jan 2025 17:57:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png budgets – 社区黑料 32 32 Funding Public Schools Based on Last Year’s Enrollment Could Help Stabilize Budgets /article/funding-public-schools-based-on-last-years-enrollment-could-help-stabilize-budgets/ Tue, 14 Jan 2025 19:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=738297 This article was originally published in

Funding for public K-12 schools in the U.S. is based on enrollment. More students mean more money. In 31 states, public to determine the current year鈥檚 funding, which makes it easier to soften the financial blow when enrollment declines. In the rest of the states, school funding is based on the current year鈥檚 enrollment 鈥 meaning that any change in attendance is immediately felt in the budget.

鈥 also known as the 鈥渉old harmless policy鈥 or 鈥渇unding protection鈥 鈥 as giving schools money for 鈥済host students,鈥 calling it costly and unfair. Concerns like this may have models in 2017, giving public finance scholars like us a perfect opportunity to assess differences between how the two models can affect school budgets.

We from 2011 to 2020, a period that includes six years before and three years after Arizona鈥檚 policy change. In each of the first three years after the state ended the funding protection policy, school districts with declining enrollment immediately received less state funding.


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Our analysis shows that school districts have more stability when state funding is based on head counts from the previous year. When enrollment fell, we found that high-income districts were more likely than their low-income counterparts to cut spending on instruction and administration and reduce the number of teachers 鈥 especially educators with less experience. This was a short-term effect. We don鈥檛 know what happens over the long term.

We didn鈥檛 explore the reason, but we believe it鈥檚 because wealthier districts had more 鈥渇at鈥 in their budgets in the first place that they could cut, while poorer ones were already pretty lean and trimmed where they could. It also seems that richer districts benefit more from a funding policy that relies on prior year鈥檚 enrollment figures.

Understanding the consequences of making this policy change is increasingly important as enrollment at America鈥檚 public schools is gradually declining. It鈥檚 .

In addition, with the federal spending for K-12 public schools, more of the burden will be placed on states. or less of school funding. Reducing federal funding may prompt more schools to switch to funding formulas based on current-year enrollment.The Conversation

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Big Districts Like Philadelphia 鈥楪amble鈥 on Higher Spending as Enrollment Falls /article/big-districts-like-philadelphia-gamble-on-higher-spending-as-enrollment-falls-study-finds/ Thu, 13 Jun 2024 10:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=728422 The Philadelphia school district is 18,000 students smaller than it was a decade ago, but you wouldn鈥檛 know it by looking at its for next school year.

Officials are dipping into reserves to cover an $88 million deficit. They鈥檙e continuing afterschool enrichment programs, like STEM and basketball, and promising to protect teaching, counseling and school leadership positions even though the COVID relief funds that paid for many of them have nearly dried up.

In talks with staff and the public, the district heard that the extra support 鈥渄ramatically moved the needle academically and should be continued,鈥 said district spokeswoman Christina Clark. Philadelphia, she added, aims to become 鈥渢he fastest improving, large urban school district in the nation.鈥


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But for now, the budget doesn鈥檛 reflect what some experts call 鈥渞ight-sizing鈥 鈥 reducing staffing levels to reflect an enrollment decline that is expected to for another decade. 

鈥淵ou鈥檙e making a big gamble,鈥 said Daniel DiSalvo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank. 鈥淵ou’re either flatlining or increasing your school spending while the number of students is falling.鈥 

But Philadelphia, which is projected to run out of reserves in two years, is far from the only urban district in that spot. In a new paper released Thursday, DiSalvo and Reade Ben, an economic policy analyst at the institute, take stock of similar issues in the nation鈥檚 largest school districts. They show that while enrollment nationally fell 2% between 2013 and 2023, the number of teachers rose 11% and per-pupil spending continued to climb.

Prior to the pandemic, population and enrollment declines tended to hit certain pockets of the country, experts say; even Philadelphia closed more than 20 schools . But district and state leaders have no experience dealing with enrollment loss of this magnitude, which is exacerbated by expiring relief funds.

鈥淗istorically, when we’ve seen districts go through these things it’s been like a few of them at a time 鈥 not like all of the big districts at once,鈥 said Marguerite Roza, director of Georgetown University鈥檚 Edunomics Lab. Those districts, she added, have 鈥渟uch a big impact on our country’s perception of what’s going on with public education.鈥

An Edunomics Lab graphic shows how staffing levels have increased over time while enrollment has plummeted. (Edunomics Lab)

Feeling the 鈥榖runt of it鈥

The amount districts spend per student increased in all nine of the cities the authors examined 鈥 New York City, Houston, San Diego, Dallas, Austin, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Antonio and Los Angeles. Houston, for example, spent $8,011 per student in 2013 and in 2022, spent $14,183.

Total staff increased over that time period in four cities 鈥 New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Dallas. The number of staff members in New York City increased from 11,202 to over 12,700.

鈥淚t is evident that school districts have yet to adjust their staffing and budgeting to the reality of fewer students,鈥 they wrote.

Their data, however, doesn鈥檛 reflect more recent actions in some districts. New York City Mayor Eric Adams $700 million from the district鈥檚 budget since November, but canceled a third round of cuts in February.

The story plays out a bit differently from state to state.

Philadelphia is looking for relief from the legislature, which is under a 2023 court order to remedy past school funding disparities. currently pending would close an annual $1.4 billion gap for the district over the next seven years and significantly reduce future deficits, Clark said.

The authors also focus on Texas, which, unlike Pennsylvania, is growing and is California as the state with the most students in public school by this fall.

But that growth is more in the and in 鈥,鈥 said Brian Eschbacher, an enrollment consultant who works with many districts in the state. He noted that school boards don鈥檛 get a lot of say in whether a charter opens in their district because the state education agency authorizes of them.

鈥淚f 5,000 students enroll in charters instead of district schools, then the district feels the entire brunt of it,鈥 Eschbacher said.

Confronting that reality, the Plano district is , while leaders in Fort Worth have delayed for now. The Fort Worth district did, however, eliminate more than that were mostly paid for with relief funds, including 鈥渟uccess coaches鈥 who worked with high school freshmen, instructional specialists and assessment staff. Another victim of enrollment loss: Full-time , which some schools are cutting.

鈥淗opefully, kids will be selecting the right book because there’s not going to be anybody there to guide them,鈥 said Trenace Dorsey-Hollins, who leads Parent Shield Fort Worth, an advocacy group. She doesn鈥檛 have a problem with the district closing schools, but understands why some community members pushed back. 鈥淪chools are like landmarks where parents and grandparents and older children have gone.鈥 

Despite declining enrollment, the Fort Worth Independent School District has scratched plans to consolidate schools for now, but it did eliminate over 130 staff positions. (Ben Noey Jr./Fort Worth Star-Telegram/Tribune News Service/Getty Images)

The outlook is more dire in California, which is another 660,000 students by the 2032-33 school year.

The reaction to those forecasts has varied. Some districts, like San Diego Unified, announced 鈥 and then 鈥 layoff notices this spring, while others, including , issued pink slips. Some plan to not replace staff members who leave or retire.

鈥淚t’s a mixed bag,鈥 said Michael Fine, CEO of California鈥檚 Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, which monitors districts in financial distress. The number of districts on his watch list actually dropped from 37 to 23 between December and March. 鈥淲hat that tells me is that school boards did what they needed to do, given the data about where they were headed.鈥

The greatest loss 鈥 278,600 students 鈥 is expected in Los Angeles County, where some districts, like Inglewood Unified, began years before the pandemic. Home to massive new pro sports and entertainment venues that are pushing up the , Inglewood is closing at the end of next school year. 

The Los Angeles Unified School District, the largest in the county, is currently from firms that will 鈥渁ttract and retain students.鈥 But the district is also closing one under-enrolled school this summer, and Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has that more are to come.

Los Angeles Unified schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho, center, has hinted that the district will consider closing under-enrolled schools in the future. (Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram/Getty Images)

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has from a shortfall in state revenues so they can adjust more gradually to the loss of federal aid. But school board members and the say the plan, which includes borrowing from reserves, is risky and could end up costing districts more in the future. 

To DiSalvo and Ben, that pushback shows that unions will push for a 鈥渘ew normal鈥 of lower staff-student ratios and higher spending.

鈥淭his will put policymakers in a bind,鈥 they wrote. To avoid cuts, they鈥檒l have to either 鈥渋ncrease taxes or find other ways to pay for schools with more teachers and staff but fewer students.鈥

Asking voters to approve a tax hike is also a risk, Roza said. In Vermont, for example, where residents vote on school budgets, many are their district鈥檚 proposals.  

鈥淰ermont has had steady enrollment declines for decades,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o communities are like, 鈥榃hy do the costs keep going up?鈥 鈥

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