Lake County Record-Bee

State lawmakers hurt charter schools, online learning with funding deal

- By Lance Izumi Lance Izumi is senior director of the Center for Education at the Pacific Research Institute. He is the author of the 2019 book Choosing Diversity: How Charter Schools Promote Diverse Learning Models and Meet the Diverse Needs of Parents an

The 2020-21 state budget signed back in June by Gov. Newsom glaringly failed to fund regular public schools and public charter schools with growing enrollment­s.

A purported “fix” to this problem, pushed by the governor and Democratic legislator­s, turns out to be just more Sacramento smoke and mirrors.

The budget for the new fiscal year froze funding for schools at their 2019-20 level, preventing additional state funding for growing schools with increased numbers of students in the fall.

This provision contradict­ed court decisions, such as the landmark Serrano II decision that ensures “equality of treatment to all the pupils in the state,” and state-education-funding reforms, such as the Local Control Funding Formula that funds charter schools based on “the total current year average daily attendance in correspond­ing grade level ranges” so that when students move from one school to another, their attendance and correspond­ing unit of ADA funding follows then to the new school.

In response, a lawsuit filed by several charter schools charged that if “funding did not adjust each year to reflect the number of students actually enrolled in each public school,” then “public schools with increasing enrollment would have fewer resources to serve more students.”

In the face of this lawsuit, Democrats put together a “fix” to address the legitimate complaint that the state would not fund every child.

Senate Bill 820 appears to fund increased numbers of students at growing schools. The state will fund higher enrollment based on either the projected number of students in schools’ own 2020-21 budgets or on their enrollment figures as of October 1, 2020. However, the bill then stipulates that funding will be based on whichever figure is lower.

To understand this sleight of hand, think about a charter school that projects 400 new students in its 2020-21 budget. However, on October 1, the school actually has 500 new students. In normal years, state funding follows students.

According to SB 820, which was recently signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom, the state will not pay for the additional students because the projected number of students in the school’s budget was the lower amount vis-a-vis the actual number of students that eventually enrolled.

As Irvine Unified School District Superinten­dent Terry Walker observed, “if actual enrollment exceeds budgeted enrollment, the district will have to absorb these costs with no additional revenue.”

Dean Forman, the founder of John Adams Academy, has pointed out that his school and others like it “use conservati­ve budget estimates in an effort to be good stewards of our public tax dollars, meaning students would still be defunded under the government’s attempts to ‘clean up’ their earlier mistake.”

“This is unacceptab­le,” says Forman. “Education funding must follow the student. Period.” Forman and other charter school advocates argue that the state is pulling the funding rug out from charter schools with such a change.

The bottom line is, as Senator Mike Morrell (R-Rancho Cucamonga) — who waged an unsuccessf­ul fight in the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee to fund non-classroomb­ased charter schools — said, “The money should follow students regardless of where they go to school.”

Sadly, California is about to demonstrat­e once again that education in the state is not about the children.

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