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Letters 97
EPP April 1997 Letter on
Special Education
April 3, 1997
The Hon. George E. Pataki
Governor of New York State
Executive Chamber, State Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
Dear Governor Pataki:
We are writing you this letter to comment on your special
education funding proposal. As a coalition of 26 civic groups in New York
City, we monitor the impact on students of budget and administrative decisions.
Our objectives are to secure educational equity for all children, improve
the quality of public school instruction, and drive available funds to
the classroom.
A special education funding system is urgently needed that
does not drive inappropriate instruction, services, and placement decisions
for children with special needs. The current system encourages a focus
on the mechanics of eligibility determinations rather than on effectiveness.
To us, genuine reform would result in utilizing resources available at
current levels to:
Develop, where possible, effective instructional
intervention to help children at low levels of academic performance;
Provide services at the earliest point in
time to enhance childrens independence and mastery;
Retrain special education program staff
so they become the locus of expertise on meeting childrens
needs rather than interpreters of regulations.
EPP does not believe that reforming special education funding
will be easy. This is why we are perplexed that you have put serious roadblocks
in the path of its acceptance by the legislature, school districts, and
parents. More importantly, we see these five roadblocks as ultimately
damaging what could be achieved for children through funding reform:
1) The creation of two ratios for special education funding.
The allocation of funds for special education programs based on a statewide
average for naturally occurring ratios of children in special education
placements makes sense. For this reason, EPP supports the Regents
proposal, based on a statewide analysis of all school districts, to establish
a universal rate of incidence of 12% of student enrollment. Why create
a higher rate of 11.73% and a lower one of 10.3% for school districts
with lower rates of referrals? This is rewarding districts with high
rates of placement and hurting school districts with lower rates, in effect,
punishing success. We can see no positive rationale for undermining
the concept of establishing a statewide, uniform funding system and statewide
standards.
2) An annual recalculation of ratios. The logic of
this proposal also escapes us in light of your stated intention of curbing
the growth of special education placements. Why would school districts
want to reduce their referral rates if their reward resulted in less excess
cost aid? Again, this seems like punishing success. The Regents
proposal, on the other hand, by keeping the ratio at 12% would create
the funding neutrality that would encourage intervention to prevent special
education placements.
3) Limited aid to districts serving a high-poverty student
body. The Regents proposal provides more funding in excess costs
for districts with student enrollment with at least a 20% poverty rate.
Studies by the U.S. General Accounting Office and the U.S. Department
of Education found that low student achievement is associated with high
concentrations of poverty. The July 28, 1992 GAO report found that in
schools with at least 126 poor children, half were low achieving. To
provide additional funding to districts only when over 65% of their students
are poor is to ignore school districts with lower levels of poverty that
require additional state assistance to prevent unnecessary special education
placements. It also provides such small amounts of additional funding
to very high poverty districts so that the additional resources cannot
possibly make much of a difference.
4) Reduction of special education funds to create more
funding for prevention services. We believe that last years
increase in Educationally Related Support Services Aid to allow students
to receive services without being placed in special education programs
was a step in the direction of creating a neutral funding system. ERSSA
increases also help to build the institutional capacity of school districts
to effectively help students directly as a transition to a new system
where placement will not drive services. EPP was prepared to thank you
for recommending a $30.3 million increase in ERSSA funds for FY 98
until we found out that this amount was transferred from public excess
cost allocations. Since we do not be believe the transition to a reformed
special education system will be easy, we do not understand why an inducement
has been transformed into a penalty.
5) The elimination of additional funds for new private
school placements of high cost students. EPP did not support the Regents
proposal, since abandoned, to raise the threshold for high cost aid from
three times the average cost of educating a student to four times. Our
objection is that, over time, higher costs would be incurred in order
to meet the threshold. We have speculated that maybe there should be a
funding ratio for high cost students that is also based on naturally occurring
incidences of students with severe disabilities. But we have come to the
conclusion that we do not have the data upon which to make any recommendation
for the appropriate funding system for these children with highly specialized
needs. But we believe that you and your budget staff also lack the
data upon which to make informed decisions. We recommend that the
State Education Department do an analysis of all school districts to ascertain
the naturally occurring incidence of students that are highly disabled
and high cost, a survey of both public and private school and BOCES costs
associated with serving these children, and the capacity of school districts
and BOCES to absorb students now in private placement. We believe more
data has to be gathered because such factors as regional costs differences
as well as the relationship of poverty to severe disability must be examine
in order to create a neutral funding system. We urge caution in this
area because a significant cost shift to local school districts will absorb
funds that should be directed at prevention of special education services
as well as improving the quality of these services.
There are many institutional forces at work that are resisting
special education reform, as you well know. But there is also a genuine
and well-founded fear among parents of special education students that
policies geared towards cost containment will ultimately lead to a diminution
of care and services for their children. The establishment of a constant
and statewide funding system with a poverty index would be a giant step
forward. Changes in the private excess cost formula should be delayed
until the major framework is established for special education funding.
EPP members realize that some of your proposals may, indeed, be simply
negotiating points. But with whom are you negotiating -- a horde of constituencies
that desperately want special education funding reform at any price? The
organized constituencies are against reform, so these "negotiating
points" are helping to give them the ammunition to kill your proposals.
From the perspective of organizations that want to improve our public
schools, stop the escalation of special education placements, and make
special education programs functional for children rather than dysfunctional,
this is very frustrating. Since last fall we have watched solid special
education funding reform proposals that have a slim chance of being adopted
being transformed into less and less appealing proposals.
Before closing, we want to urge you to direct your staff
or the Education Department to look into the implementation of
the special education reforms that was adopted last year. EPP has received
anecdotal reports that parents in New York City who are only seeking speech
services for their children are still being told that their children must
still have the entire battery of tests for evaluation of their
psychological, social, and education needs in order to receive these services.
Even though ERSSA funds were increased last year to provide children with
access to services without having to be formally placed in special education,
parents have been told that the New York City Board of Education is still
negotiating with the unions on how to provide these services under ERSSA
and until these negotiations are completed they cannot get these services
without this lengthy evaluation and placement procedures. Since almost
a year has gone by, we are concerned that at least in this school district
the full benefits of the ERSSA funding have not brought about significant
improvements. Preschool reforms adopted last year to provide more itinerant
services to children seem also to have not succeeded as fully as we had
hoped. Our assumption was that finally groups of children in Headstart
and day care centers would get access to services such as speech therapy
and that the itinerant service providers would go to these locations to
work with small groups of children. Instead, we have gotten anecdotal
reports that children are being individually, and one by one, transported
at public expense to itinerant service providers. This strikes us as once
again another example of vendor-driven excess at the expense of services
to children. Are these isolated instances or are they widespread?
EPP members believe that improvements in the quality of
the special education system are possible and necessary. We hope to work
with you in efforts to secure high quality instruction and services for
special needs children.
Sincerely,
Jan Atwell, Chairperson
Noreen Connell, Executive Director
CC
Assembly Majority Speaker Sheldon Silver
Assembly Education Committee Chair Stephen Sanders
Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno
Senate Education Committee Chair Charles Cook
NYS Education Commissioner Richard Mills
NYC Board of Education Chancellor Rudolph Crew
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