By Vivian Po, New America Media
State funding for California’s K-12 public schools has fallen by $7
billion since the onset of the recession. The state now spends $1,000
less per student than it did in 2007-2008.
“There has been a
very large reduction in revenues that determine Prop 98, California's
formula for calculating minimum school funding,” said Jonathan Kaplan,
senior policy analyst with the California Budget Project, a nonpartisan
group that monitors fiscal and policy issues.
Per student
spending is now close to the 1989-90 level, after adjusting for
inflation. “We are basically at a similar level of funding than we were
at 20 years ago,” Kaplan said.
Prop 98, or the Classroom
Instructional Improvement and Accountability Act, was passed by voters
in 1988. It requires the state to spend a minimum percentage of its
budget on K-12 and community college education. It is by far the largest
source of dollars schools receive.
In good times, the Act
provided ever-increasing funds that grew each year with the economy and
number of students. But with the rapid drop in tax revenues following
the onset of the recession, funding on K-12 plummeted from $50.3 billion
in the 2007-2008 school year to $43 billion in 2008-2009, where it has
remained static.
Schools See a 6 Percent Reduction Per Student
Local
school districts have offset the deep cuts in state funding through a
mix of strategies, from tapping to one-time only federal stimulus
dollars to deferring unpaid programs to the following year’s budget, a
practice known as deferral.
The state began significantly
relying on deferrals in 2008-09, when the state delayed $3 billion in
payments to the next fiscal year to balance the budget. The state has
continued to rely on payment deferrals to achieve budget savings by
increasing deferrals in the last years. For the 2011-12, the state will
be deferring $9.5 billion in K-12 payments.
“It doesn’t mean
that programs necessarily went down by the same amount because districts
are borrowing and using federal dollars to supplement them,” explains
Jennifer Kuhn, director of K-12 education with the Legislative Analyst’s
Office (LAO).
Thanks to the promised dollars from deferrals, as
well as federal stimulus money, Quality Education Investment Act (QEIA)
and other state funds, Kuhn found the actual drop per pupil funding was
about $500.
“We have funding down 6 percent in 2011-2012 from
the 2007-2008 level on a per pupil per program basis,” said Kuhn. The
results are visible in increased class sizes, shortened school year, and
teacher furloughs.
Mid-Year Budget Risk: The Triggers
All
this, of course, is before mid-year trigger cuts. Governor Jerry Brown
announced yesterday that K-12 school districts will face another $79.6
million reduction in general funding, along with a $248 million
elimination of school bus funding.
Though the mid-year cuts was
not as dramatic as many predicted for this year, the budget future on
education remains uncertain. The budget shortfall for 2012-2013 could
reach $13 billion unless voters pass one of numerous revenue proposals
on the November 2012 ballot.
“If none of them is adopted, then
presumably that 13 billion will come largely from cuts,” said Kuhn.
“Education will bear some portion of that reduction."
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