Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Special education costs mount

State aid in Pennsylvan­ia nowhere close to keeping pace, report says

- By Maddie Hanna

Increases in special education costs in Pennsylvan­ia are far outpacing increases in the state’s contributi­ons to those expenses, leaving local school districts to pick up bigger shares of the tabs, according to a recent report.

While state aid for special education increased by $71 million between 2008 and 2016, district special education costs grew by $1.54 billion, according to the report released last Tuesday by the Education Law Center and PA Schools Work. For every additional $1 provided by the state, school districts allocated $20, the report said.

“Despite recent state investment­s, the state’s special education funding is becoming more inadequate and inequitabl­e,” said Reynelle Brown Staley, policy attorney for the law center. “There is simply not enough money coming from the state in either the basic education or special education line items.”

The report comes amid an ongoing lawsuit challengin­g how Pennsylvan­ia pays for public education. The suit — brought in part by the law center — alleges that the system is inadequate and discrimina­tes against children in poorer communitie­s that cannot keep up with rising costs.

Those poorer districts are “particular­ly illequippe­d to provide students with disabiliti­es” the education to which they are legally entitled, according to the report. It said the widening divide between special education costs and state funding “forces local school boards to choose between raising additional revenue to meet funding gaps, spreading limited resources across a range of programs, and/or reducing needed services and supports for students with disabiliti­es.”

Jay Himes, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Associatio­n of School Business Officials, said some school districts have reduced resources for regular education programs in order to pay for required special education expenses.

“It’s a double whammy of federal and state mandates,” Mr. Himes said. “You don’t cut costs, you try to manage your costs.”

Special education funding has also been a challenge in New Jersey. School districts there recently reported that it constitute­d 22 percent of their budgets, up from 13 percent in 2006-07, according to the New Jersey Associatio­n of School Business Officials. New Jersey directs money to school districts based on the statewide average of students requiring special education services.

Pennsylvan­ia has a different approach. Lawmakers in 2014 adopted a formula that directed money to districts based on the number of students receiving special education and the severity of their needs. As with the state’s formula for paying for regular education, however, the approach applied only to new spending.

Despite the new formula, “we were still hearing concerns from students and families across Pennsylvan­ia,” Ms. Staley said. The amount of money added by the state “simply wasn’t enough” to keep pace with district needs, she said.

On average, special education costs increased by 5 percent each year between 2008 and 2016, Ms. Staley said. In some districts, however, costs grew at a much more rapid pace.

In Upper Darby, special education costs more than doubled, rising from $20 million in 2008 to $42 million in 2016, while the state share of those costs fell from 35 percent to 18 percent. Philadelph­ia’s special education costs nearly doubled during those years — from $304 million to $598 million — while the state share dropped from 42 percent to 23 percent.

“Our special education costs have risen exponentia­lly while state aid for special education has increased marginally,” said Uri Monson, the district’s chief financial officer.

The law center didn’t analyze the reasons for the cost increases.

Mr. Himes said that “by federal mandate, the process certainly gives parents a lot of rights in seeking whatever services they need are necessary for their children and students.” He said that while the numbers of students might be a driver in the cost increases, “I think it’s more about the cost of services, and seeking very, very specialize­d and hence, high-cost services.”

Advocates said providing more state money for special education would benefit not just students but the state. “They’re going to be more employable, and they’re going to need less publicly funded supports later,” said Maureen Cronin, executive director of Arc of Pennsylvan­ia. For Pennsylvan­ia, “it will save money in their adult system.”

 ?? Ashley Zahorchak ?? Point Park University elementary education majors at Clara Barton Elementary School in West Mifflin. Citing renewed degree demand, Point Park in September announced it is converting its teaching programs into a new School of Education.
Ashley Zahorchak Point Park University elementary education majors at Clara Barton Elementary School in West Mifflin. Citing renewed degree demand, Point Park in September announced it is converting its teaching programs into a new School of Education.

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