New Jersey Announces a New School Funding Formula:
But What About Abbott?
After a solid year of working out the intricacies sowed
by the mix of money, schools and politics, New Jersey
governor Jon S. Corzine announced a long-awaited new
school funding plan. A
New Formula for Success: All Children, All Communities
was approved on an expedited basis by the New Jersey
Legislature on January 7, 2008. Under the new formula,
the state will allocate approximately $7.8 billion to
K-12 education for fiscal year 2009, a seven percent
and $532 million increase to this year’s education
budget. Furthermore, all districts will see a boost
in school funding ranging from 2 to 20 percent during
the first two years of its implementation.
Yet, despite these increases, the formula has spurred
a cautious reaction throughout the state, especially
in the low-income Abbott districts. The New York Times
reports that “the proposed increases represent
the largest gain in state aid in more than a decade
for some affluent suburban districts, but they were
a sharp disappointment for many historically poor urban
districts that have received more support in the past.”
Educators across the board agree that they do not yet
have enough information to fully judge the new plan.
School Funding Background and Implications
of the New Formula
New Jersey implemented a two-tiered funding system
following the Abbott v. Burke decision in 1991, which
guaranteed the state’s poorest 31 urban districts
funding equal to its wealthiest ones. After this decision,
the 31 Abbott districts were allocated money through
a unique calculation to account for the fact that it
was easier for wealthier districts to raise money through
property taxes. According to David Sciarra, attorney
representing the Abbott districts and executive director
of the Education Law Center, the base funding proposed
in the new formula would mean that Abbott districts
would get funding amounts closer to the state average
and not to the levels of the wealthiest districts, as
mandated by the Supreme Court.
Frustrated by what he calls a “court-driven,
ad-hoc system” of distributing state aid, Governor
Corzine argues that New Jersey’s current funding
method “leaves too many children out of luck simply
because they live in the wrong ZIP code.” Through
what Corzine labels a “unified and Constitutionally
appropriate approach to school funding,” the new
formula will allocate similar resources to similarly
situated students, regardless of where they live. According
to Education Commissioner Lucille E. Davy, the new formula
“follows the basic principle that children with
greater needs deserve greater resources” and it
will better address the needs of the 49 percent of low-income
students that live outside the Abbott districts, and
have not been covered by the Abbott litigation.
Davy insists that "there is absolutely no intention
to undermine the progress we have made in Abbott districts,"
but Abbott advocates disagree. Sciarra, fears state
aid increases will not keep up with rising inflationary
costs under the new formula. “These districts
are going to have to start making significant cuts,"
Sciarra reports. Though Abbott districts will still
receive more than half of all state aid under the new
plan, 22 of these districts will receive the minimum
2 percent increase. Advocates testified at legislative
hearings that this move will choke the ongoing reforms
that have begun to show progress in those communities.
Camden School Board President, Sara Davis, said the
proposed formula will be "devastating" to
her district, which relies on state and federal funding.
“We don't have any other way to make up for that
funding," Davis said. Sciarra agrees that the plan
will “dismantle the unprecedented success”
that Abbott districts have achieved in improving student
performance.
The Devil is in the Details
School officials throughout the state are worried about
the details of the plan. One superintendent said he
was "elated" at the prospect of a 20 percent
funding boost from the state, but he also wanted more
information. Likewise, a lobbyist for the New Jersey
Association of School Administrators shared his concerns
at a hearing before the Senate budget and education
committees by saying his petition had changed from “show
me the money” to “show me the formula.”
Davy describes the new funding plan as a “fair,
balanced, equitable and logical system of allocating
state education aid.” Under the plan, aid will
be distributed through a foundation formula based on
a costing-out study that determines the amount of money
each district needs to spend to allow every student
to attain New Jersey’s educational standards.
The base amount varies with grade level, and additional
weights will be used to account for at-risk, special
education, and limited English proficiency students.
The formula also includes an additional weighting for
students in areas of high poverty concentration.
The biggest winners in the plan appear to be middle-class
districts with growing enrollment, especially those
that have seen increases in poor and limited English
proficiency students. The funding formula holds all
districts in the state “harmless” for the
first three years, meaning that no districts will lose
aid during this period. After three years, the formula
specifies that aid can decrease for districts in which
student enrollment drops. Funding for special education
under the new plan, is allocated based on average statewide
special education costs, based on the “census
method.” Some districts that have developed strong
special education programs worry that they will be shortchanged,
under the wealth-equalized method, if they have more
than average enrollment.
In addition, the formula will impose aid caps to “ensure
efficient and effective decisions regarding the increase
in aid.” For districts spending below adequacy
levels, increases will be capped at twenty percent;
for those spending above adequacy levels, increases
will be capped at ten percent. Moreover, districts spending
over their adequacy budgets will be required to use
a portion of their aid increase for property tax relief.
Sciarra insists that the governor’s plan to change
the Abbott system requires court approval and that it
will be “vigorously oppose[d]” by his group.
Corzine has indicated that he “foresees phasing
out the Abbott districts,” but he agrees that
the move “will require Supreme Court approval.”
Prepared by Marcela Briceno, December 17, 2007
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