Las Vegas Review-Journal

Report: CCSD funding unequal

Schools in poorer neighborho­ods hurt by teachers’ salaries

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

The way the Clark County School District doles out money to schools creates an inequitabl­e system that penalizes students in poorer neighborho­ods, according to a report released Thursday that directed officials to come up with a fairer funding mechanism.

The report unveiled at a State Board of Education meeting highlighte­d what has been an open secret for years in the district: that schools in wealthier neighborho­ods attract many of the most experience­d and therefore highly paid teachers.

But State Superinten­dent Steve Canavero, who has authority under the state-mandated reorganiza­tion of the nation’s fifth-largest school district to oversee the budgeting process, said that the district needs to change the way it compensate­s schools for their teachers.

In the past, Clark has budgeted for teacher salaries based on the cost of an “average” teacher. So, if a school needed 15 teachers based on enrollment, it would receive 15 times the average salary for its budget.

But schools with higher proportion­s of more experience­d teachers — primarily in affluent areas — blow through that portion of their budgets every year because their teachers earn more money, which is paid out of a central district account. That means schools with less experience­d and lower-paid teachers come in under budget, thus keeping the teaching budget in balance but creating an inequitabl­e system for students attending schools in poorer areas.

“We’re funding schools that are serving at-risk students at possibly a much lower level than we’re funding

SCHOOLS

schools in the affluent areas and it’s all invisible, we can’t see it,” state board Vice President Mark Newburn said of the report, adding it’s probably the first time such numbers have been brought to light.

Clark County School District spokeswoma­n Kirsten Searer said achieving equity is the district’s top priority.

“As this report acknowledg­es, addressing this issue could require more resources to go to some schools at the expense of others,” she said, adding the county School Board has identified the issue as a legislativ­e priority heading into the 2019 session.

Canavero stopped short of providing a solution, noting that the report concluded that changing

the system overnight would create chaos at some schools that have benefited under the current funding scheme.

He instead recommende­d the creation of a working group within the school district to design, develop and help implement a new funding model, based on the needs of the student who attend the schools rather than teacher salaries.

Under such a formula, for example, principals might get a lump sum of money based on their students’ specific needs and then hire teachers accordingl­y. Principals would have to balance the high cost of experience­d teachers with the number of teachers they need to realistica­lly staff the school.

Incentive program floated

State board member Felicia Ortiz wanted to know if an incentive program could be created to entice

more experience­d teachers to stay at schools in poorer neighborho­ods rather than “migrate” to the suburbs, adding that extra money alone may not work.

“There’s only so far that more pay goes,” she said.

Ortiz and Newburn both questioned whether having Clark County oversee the working group was a wise idea, given that the district has long allocated money inequitabl­y.

“This was a fairly open secret. They have lost the right to control the solution of this problem,” Newburn said.

Canavero indicated he’d be open to having outside members in the working group but would decide on the final makeup at a later meeting.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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