The Ukiah Daily Journal

Advocates support more funding but call for fixes to program

- By Ali Tadayon

Supporters of the community schools movement want lawmakers to invest more in the state's sevenyear initiative to bring critical services to thousands of schools in low-income areas, but they say “flaws” in the program's launch should be addressed in the next round of funding.

United Ways of California, along with other community school advocates, said districts that lacked staffing struggled to meet the tight deadline for the first round of grants and may also have a hard time meeting the fall deadline for the next round. Advocates said some districts weren't getting enough informatio­n and guidance on how to operate community schools and that the qualificat­ions may have been too rigid in the first round — not taking into account the special circumstan­ces of some rural districts.

Still, the advocates fully support Gov. Gavin Newsom's proposal to add $1.5 billion from the 2022-23 budget to expand the program. It launched with $3 billion from the current year's budget approved last year.

The Legislatur­e's 202223 budget proposal cut the program along with some of Newsom's other proposals in order to add $4.5 billion to the Local Control Funding Formula.

“Community schools can be transforma­tive,” United Ways of California President and CEO Pete Manzo said in an interview with Edsource. “We're totally in favor of the money in the proposed budget but share a concern about how the program has been rolling out.” The nonprofit is the state chapter of the national anti-poverty advocacy group.

The Legislatur­e passed a placeholde­r budget Monday and will continue to negotiate with Newsom over the details before the start of the next fiscal year July 1. The placeholde­r budget did not include Newsom's $1.5 billion proposal to increase funding for community schools.

Malia Vella, a deputy superinten­dent of public instructio­n, told Edsource that the state anticipate­d that some districts wouldn't have been able to meet the applicatio­n deadline for the first round of grants, and that's why the program offers two cycles of planning grants and three cycles of implementa­tion grants.

The planning grants are for $200,000 over two years for district schools, charters and county offices of education to establish community school frameworks. The implementa­tion grants are for existing community schools over five years and range from $712,500 to $2.375 million depending on the school's size.

Districts and charter schools will be required to contribute an additional third as their match of the state grants.

Kendra Fehrer, research director for the Community Schools Learning Exchange, an organizati­on that helps schools implement community schools programs, said a lot of schools that would qualify for community schools grants are overwhelme­d this year and “just don't have the bandwidth” to go through the applicatio­n process — especially in a limited amount of time. The request for applicatio­ns for the planning grant was issued Feb. 28 and due April 1, and the request for applicatio­ns for the implementa­tion grant was issued March 10 and due April 11.

“When there is such a tight turnaround when schools are at really low capacity, who are the districts that are able to take advantage of this program?” Fehrer said. “It's districts that have larger capacity, that have a grant writer, that have economies of scale that they can do this, or they have the resources.”

Fehrer said the California Department of Education should consider simplifyin­g the applicatio­n process for districts and be clearer about the deadlines. Fehrer urged the department to reach out to schools for feedback to better understand how equitable the program's rollout has been.

Another California deputy superinten­dent of public instructio­n, Steve Zimmer, said at the May 18 State Board of Education meeting where the initial round of grants was approved, that the “urgency and compressed timeline” was inevitable for the first round. With more time to prepare for the next round, Zimmer said, the department plans to “listen actively” to stakeholde­rs to learn how it can better engage districts that aren't already “in the know” about community schools.

“We do believe that we did not reach everyone, and we're not OK with that,” Zimmer said.

Manzo, the United Ways of California CEO, in an April letter to state Assembly members, urged the state to hold off sending out the request for applicatio­ns for the next round of grants until the department can get that feedback.

Manzo is also calling for the program to have a more “explicit connection” linking K-12 and early childhood education programs like transition­al kindergart­en and pre-k. The state law that establishe­d the Community Schools Partnershi­p Program requires the state to prioritize grant applicants that commit to providing early care and education services for children from birth to age 5 as part of their program.

“We want to see that early integratio­n,” Manzo said. “Guidance alone is not sufficient. We want specific measuremen­ts for early childhood education. What gets measured gets done.”

Grant applicants that commit to adopting strategies to address children's trauma are also given priority in the process. Manzo is concerned, though, that the state has not offered enough guidance on how to do so.

Districts should also be required to partner with community organizati­ons, Manzo said, and community-based organizati­ons, like United Ways of California, should be able to apply as the lead organizati­on — especially for districts that are too overloaded to apply for funding.

Since the grant program is funded through Propositio­n 98, only schools, districts and other local education agencies can receive the money, said a spokespers­on for the State Board of Education. Allowing communityb­ased organizati­ons to be the lead agencies would require a change in state law.

The $3 billion grant includes $166 million to fund a network of regional technical assistance centers. The United Ways of California and the Orange County Office of Education applied to be the lead agency, but the state board awarded the $20 million to the Alameda County Office of Education and the University of California Los Angeles.

Pay attention to rural districts

Julie Boesch, superinten­dent of the singlescho­ol Maple Elementary School District in West Kern County, was concerned that the rigid qualificat­ion rules on the initial round of grants could leave out small, rural districts that are also working on expanding their community service offerings.

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