Yuma Sun

Report: More funds going to classrooms

But total spending per pupil still lags behind

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX — A large infusion of new cash has finally resulted in the first increase in years in the percentage of dollars that schools are putting into the classroom.

New figures Thursday from the Auditor General’s Office has 53.8 cents of every dollar spent this past school year on instructio­n statewide. That largely includes salaries and benefits for teachers and aides as well as instructio­nal supplies like pencils and paper, instructio­nal software, athletics, band and choir.

That compares with 53.5 cents for the prior year.

More to the point, it’s the first increase in 13 years.

But Auditor General Debra Davenport said the instructio­nal share is still 4.8 percent below the high point in 2004. And even after adjusting for inflation, total per pupil spending is $146 less now than it was in 2004.

What’s fueling this year’s bump is an additional nearly $341.8 million put into public schools, largely because of voter approval in 2016 of Propositio­n 123. Most of that cash came from the state land trust, proceeds from the sale and lease of state lands that already were being held in reserve for schools.

Of that total, Davenport reports, more than $200 million went into instructio­n.

Still, Arizona remains below the national average of 60.7 cents of every dollar going into instructio­n. But Davenport said there are some reasons for that.

On one hand, she said the additional dollars allowed school district average pay to increase by 4.3 percent, to $48,372. But even with

that increase, Davenport said salaries here are about 17 percent below the national average.

The report also says the state spends less than average on instructio­n simply by putting more students into classrooms. The average class size in Arizona is 18.6; the figure is 16 nationally.

But Davenport said the lower-than-average percentage of each dollar spent in the classroom cannot be blamed on administra­tive costs. Arizona schools put an average of 10.4 percent into the category that includes superinten­dents, principals, business managers, clerical staff, warehousin­g, printing and human resources. That compares with 11.2 percent nationally.

Overall, the study finds that Arizona spends far less on its students than the national average — $8,141 in operationa­l costs versus $11,454.

That correlates with contention­s by school officials that at least part of the reason they are spending less on instructio­n is that there are other fixed costs over which they have little control.

It also plugs in to the argument that schools are having to divert the limited state dollars they get to capital needs, including computers, books and buses, money that could otherwise be used in the classroom.

That is at the heart of a lawsuit pending in Maricopa County Superior Court accusing the governor and lawmakers of failing to live up to their constituti­onal obligation to provide dollars for those costs. Plaintiffs in that lawsuit, including some school districts and education groups, contend the shortfall is in the neighborho­od of $300 million a year. Crane School District is one of the plaintiffs in the case.

In January, Gov. Doug Ducey announced a plan to eventually restore full funding for the “district additional assistance’’ account — the one that funds textbooks, computers, school buses and some capital needs — to bring it back to the $371 million it should be according to state law. But to date the Legislatur­e has not acted on that proposal and the judge just last month refused to dismiss the case.

Christine Medrano, manager of school audits for the Auditor General’s Office, said the fact that Arizona spends about $3,300 per pupil less than the national average on public education can be considered one factor for why the percentage spent in the classroom lags other states. But she said it’s not that simple. Take the cost of utilities. “I do agree that they may not have a say in what rate they’re going to be charged,’’ Medrano said. “But they can do things ... for example with energy conservati­on, to control the amount of energy that they use.’’

Several school districts in Yuma County utilize solar panels to help offset their electricit­y bills, which for larger districts can run into five figures on a monthly basis.

Medrano noted the report contains numerous examples of efficient districts, with some of them having classroom spending percentage close to or even exceeding the national average.

What is clear is there are wide variations between efficient and inefficien­t school districts. And the report says there are some common threads among both categories.

“For example, more efficient districts monitored performanc­e measures, used staffing formulas, had energy conservati­on plans, maximized the use of free federal food commoditie­s, limited waste by closely monitoring meal production, and adjusted bus routes to ensure that buses were filled to at least 75 percent capacity,” the report says. “In contrast, less efficient districts had costly benefit packages and higher noninstruc­tional staffing levels, operated schools far below designed capacity, did not monitor energy consumptio­n, had poorly written vendor contracts, and paid bus drivers for time spent not working.’’

All that makes a difference. “Districts that operate efficientl­y allocate more of their resources to instructio­n,’’ according to the report.

And the report did find wide disparitie­s

She said the Chandler Unified School District spent just $597 per pupil for administra­tion. That compares with $680 for similarsiz­ed district — and $1,006 in the Tucson Unified School District.

The cost of feeding students also can vary widely.

In the Gadsden School District, the cost came in a $2.63 per pupil, with an average for other comparable districts at $3.04. By contrast, food costs at Antelope Union High School District came in at $4.75 for each student.

In general, the report finds that larger school districts spend less on administra­tion than smaller ones, “primarily because of their economies of scale and their ability to spread some of those costs over more students.’’

Transporta­tion costs, however, are another matter.

Medrano acknowledg­ed that rural districts probably put more miles on their buses than urban ones. But she said the rural districts have a lower cost per mile, perhaps because the buses operate more efficientl­y, what with driving on highways and open roads and having less stop-and-go traffic and fewer stops each mile to pick up students.

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