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Reeling from unprecedented cuts to the state鈥檚 K-12 funding in the just-concluded legislative session, Florida school districts are scrambling to slash an average of $131 per student by eliminating teacher aides, consolidating bus routes, and canceling before- and after-school programs.
The reductions in state education aid鈥攃oupled with cuts approved in two special sessions last year鈥攎ean districts will receive about 5 percent less in 2008-09 than they did in the previous school year.
鈥淚t was a disastrous session,鈥 said Wayne Blanton, the executive director of the Florida School Boards Association.
Facing a massive projected deficit and a third consecutive year of declining tax revenues, lawmakers cut $4 billion from the state budget, approving a $66.2 billion fiscal 2009 spending plan that allocates . That鈥檚 $332 million, or 2 percent, less for schools than in the current fiscal year.
Complicating matters is a constitutional requirement, passed in 2002, that requires districts to reduce class sizes. The requirement must be fully phased in by the beginning of the 2008-09 school year. (鈥淟eaner Class Sizes Add Fiscal Stress to Florida Districts,鈥 Feb. 20, 2008.)
In addition, Florida voters in February approved a constitutional amendment that slashed their property taxes, which could further cut revenue to schools.
Florida鈥檚 three-year decline in state tax revenues is an 鈥渦nprecedented event鈥 for the state according to Corina Eckl, the fiscal-program director for the Denver-based National Conference of State Legislatures, who identified the Sunshine State as one of the most financially troubled in the country at a recent conference on the health of state budgets. (鈥淪tate Fiscal Woes Start to Put Squeeze on K-12 Budgets,鈥 May 7, 2008.)
Republican |
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Senate: 14 Democrats 26 Republicans |
House: 42 Democrats 78 Republicans |
Enrollment: 2.63 million |
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, a Republican, largely ignored the budget cuts during his He praised state lawmakers for their 鈥済reat work鈥 in not raising taxes, while continuing to ensure a 鈥渜uality education.鈥 He touted the legislature鈥檚 continued funding of a merit-award program that gives teachers cash bonuses worth up to 10 percent of their salaries, and a new requirement that middle school students, beginning in the 2009-10 school year, take one semester of physical education.
But the budget situation is having a much more immediate effect at the local level. Mr. Blanton, of the school boards鈥 association, said officials in many districts have been in budget-cutting workshops trying to determine how to reduce their spending. The impact varies by district because of the complicated school funding formula and individual districts鈥 enrollment trends. Some districts are losing $77 per student on average, while others are losing as much as $213 per student.
Mr. Blanton said he was unsure whether districts could make the cuts without laying off teachers. Some districts are throwing around more-drastic budget-cutting ideas, such as going to four-day school weeks and closing schools, he said.
鈥淚t will make for a rough couple of months,鈥 Mr. Blanton said last week.
In the 258,000-student Broward County School District, superintendent James F. Notter must cut an additional $61 million from his $2.3 billion budget next year, or 2.7 percent, on top of $34 million he had to cut this year. What鈥檚 more, he has to slash his capital budget by $250 million, or about 10 percent.
鈥淭he heartache there is your capital plan is where you purchase your technology,鈥 Mr. Notter said. 鈥淚n my 22 years in Florida, I have never seen these kind of budget reductions鈥攐n the operating and the capital side. It鈥檚 double-crippling.鈥
Tax-Credit Aid Boosted
Despite the budget crisis, the legislature approved a $30 million expansion of the , originally created in 2001. That program gives companies tax credits for donations to scholarship organizations that in turn grant voucher-style tuition aid to students to attend private schools.
The legislature increased the cumulative statewide cap on the amount of tax credits that companies can claim to $118 million a year, up from $88 million. The bill also increases to a maximum of $3,950 the amount of the scholarships, an increase of $200.
Florida鈥檚 tax-credit program is the largest of its kind in the nation鈥20,076 students used the scholarships this school year to attend 910 secular and religious private schools as of February, according to a legislative analysis. The higher tax-credit cap will result in an additional 6,000 scholarships a year.
鈥淭he Florida expansion is by far the biggest movement within the school choice arena this year,鈥 said Lori Drummer, the director of state projects for the Washington-based Alliance for School Choice. She noted that an increasing number of Democrats, especially those who are African-American, supported the bill in Florida.
John F. Kirtley, the president of Tampa-based group Step Up for Students, which helps implement the corporate-tax-credit program, said his group had to turn down 10,000 scholarship applications last fall. Step Up for Students serves as the middleman between the companies who make the donations and the students who receive the scholarships.
And even though the tax credits cost the state money in lost corporate-tax revenue, that the state could end up saving about $5 million a year because it will no longer have to pay per-pupil expenditures to the students who leave for private schools.
鈥淚n the end, the K-12 budget in Florida is $20-something-billion,鈥 said Mr. Kirtley, and the cost of the tax-credit program is 鈥渁bout $30 million. 鈥 The argument these parents [of participating students]were making was just so strong.鈥
The legislature also approved measures that would lessen the effect of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test, or FCAT, on school accountability grades. Now, schools are graded as part of the state鈥檚 accountability system on the basis of student performance on the FCAT alone. Under the legislation, which Gov. Crist is expected to sign, the FCAT would constitute half the grade, with other factors鈥攕uch as graduation rate and scores on Advanced Placement tests鈥攎aking up the rest of schools鈥 grades.
Also significant in this legislative session was what didn鈥檛 pass.
The legislature failed to adopt a constitutional-amendment proposal that would have revamped the board of governors that oversees the Florida higher education system, given the legislature the authority to set college tuition, and made the education commissioner, who is now appointed by the state board of education and supervises the prekindergarten through community college system, an elected position.
The legislature also failed to approve a bill that would have given districts more flexibility in implementing the constitutional requirement to reduce class size. Legislation that would have tightened accountability on charter schools also failed, as did a bill that would have guaranteed teachers the right to challenge the theory of evolution in science classes. (鈥溾楢cademic Freedom鈥 Used as Basis of Bills to Question Evolution,鈥 May 14, 2008.)