Commentary: Bill would close an intolerable loophole for schools
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2020/05/commentary-bill-would-close-intolerable.html?m=0
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A bill introduced by Assemblymember Shirley Weber (D - San Diego) seeks to close a LCCF loophole. | |
By Dan Walters |
CalMatters Columnist |
Early in
his second governorship, Jerry Brown championed a major overhaul of school
finance that, he pledged, would close the stubborn “achievement gap” that
separated poor and English-learner students from children of more privileged
circumstances.
Restrictions
were lifted on some forms of state school aid, dubbed “categoricals,” thus
giving local school districts more flexibility in spending, and they also were
given extra money specifically to help underachieving children catch up.
However,
the Local
Control Funding Formula, as it was officially called, had some odd provisions,
particularly what Brown called “subsidiarity,” which he derived from an obscure
snippet of theological dogma.
As Brown
explained it, he would trust local educators to spend the money effectively on
its purposes, without tight oversight from Sacramento — a principle he did not
apply to other state-local programs, by the way.
In
practice, subsidiarity had two effects. It allowed school districts to loosely
interpret whether the additional state aid met its intended purposes, and
absolved Brown of any political accountability for outcomes. The latter was
expressed in his response to one of the lawsuits that ensued. Having given
local authorities money to attack inequity in schools, he said, the state was
not legally responsible for whether at-risk children fared better.
In the
absence of state oversight and accountability, civil rights and education
reform groups, loosely gathered in an “equity coalition,” challenged the
implementation of LCFF district-by-district, often via lawsuits, in attempts to
ensure that the money was being used wisely.
Little by
little, the patterns of neglect emerged in journalistic examinations of how the
billions of extra dollars were spent, in academic studies and in a few official
reviews.
Late last
year, State Auditor Elaine Howle released a highly
critical report on how school districts were spending LCFF funds,
based on detailed examinations of three representative districts.
It decried
the lack of accountability and was especially critical of one provision of the
law allowing districts to convert LCFF funds unspent in one year into general
revenues that could be spent for any purpose. Obviously, that’s a perverse
incentive for districts to drag their feet on helping the at-risk students.
“Until the
state ensures that districts spend all supplemental and concentration funds to
benefit the intended student groups, and that they provide clear, accessible
information regarding that spending … the intended student groups may not
receive the services necessary to close the state’s persistent achievement
gaps,” Howle told the Legislature.
The report
provided an opening for Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, a Democrat from San Diego
who has been one of the state’s most persistent critics of LCFF’s shortcomings.
Weber, an educator herself, sees it — correctly — as a fundamental issue of
civil rights.
In
January, Weber introduced Assembly
Bill 1835, which would simply require LCFF funds to be used solely for the
education of students they are supposed to help and not be diverted into
general purposes, thus closing a yawning loophole that should never have been
there in the first place.
It’s one
of the relatively few bills that legislative leaders are allowing to proceed in
this pandemic-tainted year. “The poor always pay more,” Weber told the Assembly
Education Committee last week. “Even in this pandemic they are suffering the
most.”
Indeed
they are. Low-income workers are heavily impacted by the pandemic-induced
recession and they and their children are the least able to participate in the
computerized home schooling that was hastily implemented after schools were
closed.
The
circumstances are likely widening the achievement gap, making educating poor
children even more urgent and neglecting their schooling even less tolerable
CalMatters
is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how
California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan
Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary
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