Friday, February 10, 2012

New Years Resolutions

Lest you think from my previous two postings that all on Capitol Hill are teaming up to destroy public education, I must include those bills that I think are very encouraging.

HB 65, sponsored by Rep. Arent, is titled “College and Career Counseling for High School Students”. It calls for an additional appropriation to increase the ratio of counselors to students by offering grants for schools to hire and train interns. These interns are to be masters degree candidates in Guidance Counseling. Here again, the need for counselors is great but an unfunded mandate would be unacceptable.

HJR 2 is a resolution sponsored by Rep Poulson, titled “Joint Resolution on World Class Curriculum”. Budget constraints and a focus on grading schools on student achievement have resulted in questioning the value of electives such as art, physical education, and other non-tested subjects. I believe in the benefit of a broad curriculum, including literature, history, foreign language and technology and welcome this reaffirmation.

Another resolution comes from Sen. Jones: SCR 5 “Concurrent Resolution Encouraging Parental Engagement in the Education of Children”. It recognizes the impact that parents can have in helping their children succeed, as well as the policies of the State Board of Education, local districts, and schools that encourage family engagement in education.

While such resolutions do not bind the state to action, they are important affirmations to principle.

Backpack Education Funding

There are more ways to cut funding to education than by sending education money to non-education entities. It can also be done by diverting the revenue up stream. Each time there is another tax credit offered to corporations or individual tax payers from their income tax, the source of education funds is more choked off.

Keep this in mind each time you hear tax credit discussions during the legislation. They are often used to stimulate an industry (such as recycling projects) or to give relief to those in need (such as families of the disabled). Tax credits are different from tax deductions. Tax credits are subtracted from the tax bill rather than from the income on which taxes are calculated. Tax deductions reduce tax revenue a little, tax credits reduce tax revenue a lot.

In this post, I will focus on “backpack funding” (No, the legislature is not buying backpacks for the kids to carry their books home!) This is the name used for a concept of how education funds are spent. The term “backpack” is applied because it provides that students each receive a finite credit for their publicly-funded education. They then take the funding with them where ever they go.

The current bill that proposes this concept is HB 123, titled “Education Savings Accounts” sponsored by Representative John Dougall. Instead of credits or vouchers in a backpack, Rep. Dougall proposes in his bill that each high school student receive a savings account, receiving the funding for each year of his or her secondary education at the beginning of that year, starting with 9th grade. For each class that the student attends, certain amounts of money are deducted from the savings account. Public schools would receive their established per class fee; online class providers could set their own fees. Students would also be allowed to enroll at any public school they want and public schools would not be allowed to charge higher fees for part-time students than for full-time students.

The maximum that a full schedule could cost would be $6,400. If a student’s SEOP determines that he will graduate early, he can access funds for future years as well. However, when the money is gone, it is gone and the student is on his own if he hasn’t earned a high school diploma by then.

It looks like public schools would not receive class funds for any released time instruction, such as seminary, internships, or courses at Applied Technology Colleges or concurrent enrollment. It allows students to apply money from their accounts for class fees normally charged for courses at their high school, so I suppose it will cover fees such as the choir robe rental fees, lab fees for chemistry, band instrument rental, etc. My high school daughter had about $200 of fees for academic classes this year that came out of our pocket. If she decides to participate in the International Baccalaureate program, my out of pocket fees will be higher still. If high school fees are now to be paid by public education funds, $6,400 won’t go as far as it used to.

In addition, students would be able to apply money from these accounts to “fees, deposits, or other charges” for activities sponsored by the school or district. That means they can apply these funds to football uniforms and equipment, golf green fees, drivers education, or cheerleader expenses. If you hate fundraisers like I do, it may sound welcome but imagine how these will soak up the account!

There are a number of additional problematic sections in this bill.
* It is not clear whether students can be charged for participating in extracurricular activities if they choose not to charge it to their “savings account”.
* It definitely would affect eligibility for extracurricular activities (for example, sports), and I wonder if the schools’ response will be to discontinue some of them.
* It creates a complex banking responsibility for the State Office of Education to track and invoice financial information for every student and each class they take, following up on class eligibility and remitting quarterly payments to every school and eligible course provider. They also must give each student access to online information about the balance of his or her account. This would become a whole new, massive department in the State Office.
* It also removes funding for Electronic High School, concurrent enrollment or school-sponsored ATC courses. Each participant interested in online courses or classes offered at colleges would enroll through the individual course providers and the State Office of Education.
* Students eligible for these accounts include those currently in public and private schools, as well as home schooled students – many more than are currently funded in public schools now.
* Finally, all these changes are to be implemented by July of this year.

There is no fiscal note attached to this bill; too much of its cost is unknown. There is also no indication that this sort of reorganization of Public Education will benefit students’ education. While it claims to provide greater choices for education, the financial strains on public education would certainly result in fewer choices and/or poorer quality in its offerings.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Funding Education

The new legislative session already well underway and I have some catch up to do. I am working with the Utah PTA as Education Commissioner so my focus has been on education bills. That is no narrow focus by any means.

It is a well-known fact that public schools in Utah are cash-strapped. Education for Utah students is funded at the lowest level in the United States. What we are able to do with the funding we get is amazing! The lowest level of funding might result in lowest level of student performance but our students are doing much better than that.

The legislators point to a statistic that the percentage of Utah’s tax burden committed to education is at a level that is fifth in the nation. If this is a surprise, we should also bear in mind that Utah’s birthrate is highest in the nation. The surprise is that we aren’t investing at the highest level in the nation.

The State Constitution put education as a high priority. Revenues from all income taxation are required to fund education. So education funding is greatly affected by changes to the laws regarding income tax.

Of particular concern is HB 299 (Rep Dougall) “Tax Revisions”. This bill lowers the income tax rate from 5% to 4%. The impact to the education fund would be to reduce it by $53.8M (that is “M” for million dollars!) in 2013. Legislative Fiscal Analysts added that in 2014 and on-going, the fund could be reduced by $215M. The bill was amended so that the rate is changed from 4% to 4.6%. The Fiscal Analyst hasn’t recomputed the impact to education or the general fund but there will be still be a substantial hit.

Next time you hear someone say that Utah's low funding is a result of large families, don't believe it. That is a "red herring." If we really dedicated income tax revenue to public education -- without all the special interest tax credits!-- we could fund education at almost twice the level.

Without the support of income tax revenue, schools would have to turn to local property tax. The most hated of all taxes is property tax. It particularly burdens the older home owners on a fixed income and creates big inequities between rich and poor communities. No one likes to pay taxes but everyone benefits from a strong and vibrant system of public education.