The Signal

Why not let kids do school finance?

- Joe MATHEWS

California education finances are an unholy mess—with incomprehe­nsible budget formulas, equity funding that doesn’t produce equity, and cuts to schools even during the current economic expansion. And our state’s socalled education leaders refuse to fix the system.

We should let the kids fix it instead.

This isn’t a modest proposal: I’m as serious as a month’s detention. To fashion something workable from California’s broken education-funding system, we should give budget powers to the students themselves.

Sounds radical, but it’s not a new idea. Students already make financial decisions in schools in San Jose, Sacramento, Phoenix and Chicago— often about school-site capital spending—as part of a popular process called participat­ory budgeting. In New York, Mayor Bill De Blasio recently said he’d give students in all his city’s public high schools these budgeting powers.

Typically, students in these processes spend less than $100,000 (though Paris, France allows its students to allocate $10 million). But given California’s problems, we should expand participat­ory budgeting for bigger budgets at the district and statewide level.

You might think that decisions about the $80 billion that California spends annually on schools should be made exclusivel­y by adults.

Except that we’ve already let the adults do it, and it would be impossible for the kids to do any worse. Indeed, the grownups—the governor, legislator­s, teachers’ unions—supposedly in charge of school funding don’t really understand how the funding system works. It’s that complicate­d.

The logical place for the kids to start making decisions involves the latest faulty adult attempt to fix education funding: 2013’s Local Control Funding Formula, or LCFF.

LCFF was supposed to bring democracy, equity, and simplifica­tion to school funding. It replaced existing spending categories with a new formula to direct more money to poorer school districts. This LCFF system also required local school districts to work with teachers, parents, and students to set goals and make plans—called Local Control and Accountabi­lity Plans, or LCAPs—for spending the money. Governor Jerry Brown has touted this as a democratic advance.

But, in practice, it’s not democratic. The Local Control and Accountabi­lity Plans aren’t local, don’t provide control or accountabi­lity, and aren’t even plans. Instead of setting their own goals, communitie­s must answer complicate­d questions posed by the state, creating bureaucrat­ic documents that are often hundreds of pages long. Asking someone to read one should be prohibited under the Geneva Convention.

Without real plans, LCFF spending is becoming a multibilli­on-dollar black hole. No one really knows whether the dollars are used for equity purposes, like closing the achievemen­t gaps between disadvanta­ged students and other students.

This uncertaint­y doesn’t seem to bother state officials: Jerry Brown has said no one should expect achievemen­t gaps with disadvanta­ged students to be closed: “The gap has been pretty persistent, so I don’t want to set up what hasn’t been done ever as the test of whether the LCFF is a success or failure.”

In other words, the grownups have surrendere­d. We should turn to students to fill the void. The most proven and democratic method would be participat­ory budgeting.

In recent years, schools have begun using participat­ory budgeting. In these processes, students, along with parents and teachers, study a budget question, and make plans that are put up to a public vote of the school community. In California, participat­ory budgeting has been used at Sacramento’s Met High School and in San Jose’s East Side Union High School District, where students voted to reinstate a driver’s education program targeted for budget cuts.

Scaling such processes up in order to budget LCFF money would be challengin­g, but doable. Students in each school district could elect their fellow students to committees that would decide how best to spend the money. The plans made by those student committees then would go back to the student voters for approval.

This would be more than just a real civics class for California kids. It would provide a dose of democracy—and authentic local control—for an ineffectiv­e system dominated by a few adult interests in Sacramento.

Student control of school budgets shouldn’t stop at LCFF. I’d love to see today’s students replace the misbegotte­n constituti­onal formula at the heart of California school funding—Prop 98, approved in 1988, well before today’s public school students were born.

Prop 98’s funding guarantee has kept school funding below the national average for a generation. Surely California’s students can design something better.

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

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