|
|
| BUDGET INFO |
|
Outcome of Prior Budget Negotitations Winter 2000 (v4#1) Governor Pataki's 2000-01 Executive Budget includes a set of education initiatives referred to as "Schools 2000." Touted in his State of the State message as "a renewed commitment to our children's education," the Governor's January budget proposal includes an overall increase in school aid of $355 million statewide, a 2.8% increase over last year's education budget. Astoundingly, the Governor's budget actually reflects a substantially reduced commitment to education, for if current aid formulas and scheduled program phase-ins were allowed to continue we would see almost a $1.2 billion increase over last year, triple the Governor's proposed increase! "Schools 2000," which focuses on four main areas (school choice, school safety, teacher recruitment and accountability) would be funded by reducing or eliminating other key programs, including class size reduction, Universal Pre-K, Bilingual education and Minor Maintenance. According to the Governor's press release, "Schools 2000 would empower parents, children, and families, create safe schools, ensure that all our children have qualified teachers, and insist that failing schools are held accountable." The reality falls somewhat short of those lofty goals. "Teachers of Tomorrow" The plan also offers "alternative credentialing routes" (to the present Master's degree in education requirement) in an attempt to recruit those with "appropriate life experience" to a second career in the field of teaching. Alternative credentialing has been used to great success in New Jersey, so New York State officials would do well to investigate their program. The Governor also proposes to grant a waiver to retired police officers, firefighters and other public employees willing to teach in shortage areas. These waivers would exempt public employees from the cap on public salaries that can be earned by those already collecting a public pension. The problem with these "Teachers of Tomorrow" initiatives is that the Governor projects that they will attract approximately 50,000 new teachers over the next ten years, if the programs were to remain in place that long. Unfortunately, projections for the number of new teachers needed by New York City alone exceed 50,000 in the next five years. Worse yet, two of the Governor's other budget proposals will make it even harder to attract and retain qualified teachers, especially in the Big 5 cities. Once again, Pataki proposes to eliminate the $67.5 million Teacher Support Aid, a salary supplement for teachers in the Big 5 cities where low salaries already impede efforts to recruit good teachers. If he succeeds, New York City and the four other large cities would have only two options: cut teachers' salaries (an impossibility) or find the money in the local budget, which means taking funds away from some other program. The Governor also proposes to eliminate state funding for the 130 teacher centers across the state, which provide needed professional development and other assistance, essential for developing and retaining good teachers. School Choice and Empowering
Parents The Governor further proposes to empower parents by requiring that schools report directly to parents on performance of all students attending that school, in addition to their own childs performance. New York City public schools already send home a "school report card" in addition to individual student report cards. Pataki also recommends that every school board be required to add a parent representative selected by the PTA as an "ex-officio," or non-voting, member. Lastly, in a move to bolster "family values" the Governor would require Civility, Character and Citizenship Education to instruct children in grades K-12 on "honesty, tolerance, personal responsibility, respect for others, observance of laws and rules, courtesy and dignity." His budget provides state funding of $500,000 to support this program. School Safety Greater Accountability? The Governor is also seeking to curtail the powers of the Board of Regents, by stripping them of unilateral authority to impose regulatory mandates on school districts. At the same time, he is looking to have a greater say in their appointment, a naked attempt to wrest control from the Democratic majority in the legislature. Currently, candidates for the Board of Regents are interviewed by both the Senate and Assembly Education Committees, which nominate candidates for joint election by both houses of the legislature. Since the Assembly outnumbers the Senate, and Democrats are now the majority in the Assembly, it is generally acknowledged that Democrats presently control selection of the Regents. Instead, the Governor is seeking to nominate candidates for the Regents from a list developed by a "blue ribbon panel" for final approval by the legislature. He further seeks authorization to select the Chancellor of the Regents and the Commissioner of Education. Reaching Higher Standards Just as he attempted last year, Governor Pataki would cut the promised expansion of pre-k and class size reduction, programs proven to improve student achievement, in favor of his own, unproven, reading programs. Reading for Results would redirect $40 million of this funding into reading programs scheduled during school breaks. Once again, the Governor wants to eliminate Categorical Reading and Improving Pupil Performance grants that benefit students at many levels and replace it with his Reading 2000 initiative targeted at students in grades 2-4 only. More Broken LADDER Promises Universal Pre-K and Class Size Reduction, the largest LADDER programs in cost as well as potential benefit, slated to be phased-in and expanded each year, would also be seriously curtailed. Universal Pre-K, funded this year at $85 million, would receive an increase of $35 million bringing the total to $120 million next year. However, as originally enacted, the program was scheduled to increase by $140 million next year to a total of $225 million, a net loss of $105 million from the promised funding level. Further, the minimum $2,700 per-child allocation would be reduced to $2,000, a recipe for failure when you consider that the cost of running Pre-K programs in the large cities averages about $3,700 per child. Governor Pataki and other critics point to the fact that only 99 out of 241 eligible districts initiated pre-k programs in 1999-00. This is not so surprising, when you consider that 1) the lateness of the budget (August) gave them very little planning time, and 2) most of the districts that didnt apply would only have received funding for 25 or fewer students. More important is the fact that the participating districts contain 90% of the eligible students. The program to create smaller classes in grades K-3 fares even worse under the Governors budget plan. Instead of the $125 million originally scheduled for 2000-01, the Governor would continue funding of the class size reduction program at this years level of $75 million, a net loss of $50 million. Whats more, the class size reduction program would serve fewer students next year despite receiving the same amount of funding, due to plans to allow "flexible" use of up to 25% of the funding (for professional development, for example). One rationale given by the Governors office for withholding additional state funds for this program is that it is not needed because theres now Federal funding to reduce class size. However, since the $50 million increase in state funding had already been slated, failure to provide those funds could jeopardize full funding for New York from the Federal class size initiative, which specifically prohibits supplanting planned local support with Federal dollars. Other Significant Changes On Special Education Reform, the Governor pushes back the clock a year, postponing until 2001-02 financial incentives for including children with disabilities in regular classes when cost projections ballooned from $13 million the first year to almost $80 million. Pataki does include an increase of $119 million, or 6.9%, in funding for public school special education programs (public excess cost aid), however, this is nearly $100 million less than is called for under present law. Private excess cost aid, for disabled students placed in private schools, in contrast, is being cut by $56 million in order to bring costs in line with those in public settings and reduce incentives to refer students to high cost private schools. Equity Not Addressed The Regents, on the other hand, have proposed some genuine reforms in school aid that would result in a much more equitable funding system. The Regents have created a five-year plan which includes: phasing out the "transition adjustment" (a manipulation that either caps the size of the increase a district can receive or "holds harmless" any district from receiving a cut in aid); adding a regional cost factor (which takes into account the higher costs in areas like New York City, Long Island and Westchester); and directing significantly more aid to high need districts. In fact, these are some of the very reforms sought by the Campaign for Fiscal Equitys lawsuit against the state (see article on p.12). Unfortunately, neither the Governor nor Legislature seems disposed to follow through on the Regents recommendations, at present, reinforcing the need to persist with the lawsuit in order to get them to change their mind.
[ Budget Info | FAQ NYC Students/Schools | State Funding Equity | Smaller Class Sizes | Facilities | Standards | Emergency Campaign Against Vouchers | Historical Facts | Lingo Translations | Best Schools/School Performance ] |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
POLICY ON USE OF
MATERIALS ON EPP WEB SITE: Individuals and organizations are free to
reproduce and/or forward information contained on our web site without
prior permission, but we ask that the Educational Priorities Panel be
cited as the source of the information. For puposes of clarity, we recommend:
|