Las Vegas Review-Journal

State school funding a battle royal

Common ground, trust sparse as districts scrounge

- By Amelia Pak-harvey and Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal By Sandy Lopez Las Vegas Review-journal

Talk to just about anyone in Nevada and they’ll agree that the state’s public education system needs to improve.

But the unanimity ends there.

Superinten­dents and many education advocates have long called for the Legislatur­e to put more money into schools.

“We need to get out of the ’60s and recognize the way

that we fund students in this state is wrong,” Clark County School District Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky said in his September retirement announceme­nt, attacking what he calls a chronic underfundi­ng of public education.

But many legislator­s and other critics say they want evidence that the school

districts are spending wisely and getting results before giving them more money.

“I think most people would agree with this: Something’s wrong; we should be doing better with what we have,” said David Gardner, a former legislator and current Clark Coun

FUNDING

It started with a simple goal — to help his grandmothe­r learn to use a computer.

Henderson resident Hudson Root remembers going over to her home as a 10-year-old and showing her how to go online to send emails and connect with family and friends. He took over for his mother, who’d become frustrated because his grandmothe­r thought the mouse should face the opposite way.

“She thought the tail should face her and the eyes should be on the computer,” Root said. “I was pretty young and very patient. I said, ‘Yes, that’s probably how a mouse should go, but let’s try it this way.’ Pretty soon, she was creating group chats with our family, sending us birthday texts with emojis and her favorite — sending religious memes or motivation­al quotes.

“She really mastered it.”

The smile on her face, he said, was thank you enough.

Now 17-year-old Root has made it a goal to bridge the digital divide that senior citizens often face.

He created Geeks for Seniors

SENIORS

ty School Board candidate. “Until we figure out what that is, CCSD is going to have trouble getting more money.”

It’s a circular debate that has not led to significan­t improvemen­t in the state’s educationa­l standing.

In a three-part series beginning today, the Las Vegas Review-journal will explore the state of school financing in Nevada and look at what needs to change to ensure that the state’s children can academical­ly compete with counterpar­ts from any other state.

Where we stand

Nevada’s quality of education consistent­ly ranks at or near the bottom of national rankings. But the Silver State also underperfo­rms by another measure: school funding. Education Week’s 2017 Quality Counts survey gave Nevada’s finances a D-minus.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, the $8,275 per pupil spent by Nevada in fiscal year 2014 was less than the amount spent by all but five states: Mississipp­i, Oklahoma, Arizona, Idaho and Utah.

Nevada’s expenditur­es for primary and secondary education also are lower than the national average, according to the National Associatio­n of State Budget Officers. In fiscal 2017, that was 16.7 percent of all spending, compared with the national average of 19.4 percent.

This year, the state allocated $2.8 billion for education, which was distribute­d according to a formula spelled out in the Nevada Plan, a blueprint designed to guarantee an equitable level of funding for school districts and charter schools.

The Nevada Plan provides per-pupil funding for each of the 17 counties based primarily on three things: a county’s wealth, transporta­tion costs and expenses. Each county has two main sources of revenue for its schools: money from the state’s Distributi­ve School Account and local revenue.

To equalize spending, the state subtracts money from districts that have more local wealth and revenue. The amount that’s left is what superinten­dents call “the base.”

Superinten­dents and other critics argue that the base is simply not enough to educate the state’s 473,000 students, the majority of whom are in Clark County.

“One of the concerns I have with the funding formula is it hasn’t kept up with inflationa­ry costs,” said

Dave Jensen, the Humboldt County School District superinten­dent. “We do need to make a concerted effort to increase the per-pupil allocation through the DSA formula.”

The superinten­dents also would like the Nevada Plan’s distributi­on formula itself to be updated to reflect the state’s more diverse student population, which includes more English-language learners who often require remedial work to catch up to their peers.

But they are hesitant to suggest big changes to the formula now, because doing so without increasing funding would reward some districts at the expense of others.

“We, as 17 superinten­dents, have agreed over the course of time that we have to continue to fund the base,” said Dale Norton, superinten­dent of the Nye County School District.

The case for Clark County

In the Clark County School District, which is grappling with a budget deficit most recently estimated at over $60 million, there are other concerns.

Certain revenue raised almost exclusivel­y in the county — such as slot, room and marijuana taxes — doesn’t go to the school district. Instead, it is sent to the Distributi­ve School Account and redistribu­ted statewide.

“It means that money that is created in Southern Nevada, that is generated in Southern Nevada, is sent to the state and … ends up going out to other counties instead of the county that it was generated in,” Skorkowsky said.

Critics also note that the portion of those taxes designated for education does not translate to additional funding for schools. Instead, that money is deducted from revenue placed in the DSA from the state general fund.

Case in point: Over $477 million originally slated for the schools was returned to the state’s general fund since fiscal 2000. That’s in part because revenue from other sources such as room and slot taxes came in higher than projected.

Some superinten­dents, including Skorkowsky, say the districts should benefit from that money, noting that some of those taxes were “sold” to The formula begins with the same per-pupil amount for every district. the public as a revenue stream for education.

The Legislatur­e has increased education funding in recent years, spurred on by Gov. Brian Sandoval. That includes funneling over $100 million for the Victory and Zoom programs, which provide more money for English-language learners and students in poverty.

Although Skorkowsky lauds those efforts, he says more needs to be done. The base, he argued, is chronicall­y underfunde­d.

Lack of trust

Each district has a ratio based on how its costs compare to the statewide average. Clark County has a ratio of 0.9563, meaning its expenses per pupil are less than the state’s average State funding is adjusted based on the wealth in the district, compared to the the statewide average.

Part of the problem is that two sides have been fighting over education funding for so long that it makes it harder to find common ground.

“We’re operating in a really low-trust environmen­t, and that’s why Clark County’s driven into the position that it’s in now,” said Nancy Brune, executive director of the nonprofit Kenny Guinn Center for Policy Transporta­tion costs can vary widely, and the state adjusts funding accordingl­y. Final funding per pupil in Clark County, after a few more minor calculatio­ns. With an estimated 355,847 students, the district will receive: Priorities, referencin­g the Clark County School District’s current funding issues.

Legislator­s and stakeholde­rs don’t trust the district to spend possible additional money in a way that will produce a return on investment, she said.

That’s likely why recent increases in education funding have primarily been categorica­l, used only for a certain purpose, like the Zoom and Victory funds, Brune said.

Similarly, state Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Steve Canavero said the education system must show it can produce results before it can ask for an increase in base funding.

“There’s a level of trust that we’re building in the state,” he said. “I think the more that we can do as an education system to increase transparen­cy and demonstrat­e results and changes that we’re making to correspond to our end of the bargain,

In search of a fair comparison

He wants Nevada to improve enough to compete with states like Arizona and Utah, which have somewhat similar demographi­cs and perform better while spending less per student, $7,457 and $6,546, respective­ly, versus Nevada’s $8,275.

Those are common comparison­s, said Mike Griffith, a school finance specialist at the Education Commission for the States, based in Denver. But they’re not necessaril­y fair ones.

“It’s hard when you compare two states because of the demographi­cs, the cost structure and their goals,” he said.

In Utah, for example, only 37 percent of students qualify for free and reduced-cost lunch, a measure of poverty. The national average is 52 percent. In Nevada, it’s 53 percent.

Nevada also has one of the highest percentage­s of students who are English-language learners. At 16 percent, it is second only to California. The national average is about 9.3 percent ; Utah is at around 6 percent.

Statistics like those argue that Nevada should devote more resources to education if it is to remain nationally competitiv­e.

“These are things that drive education costs,” Griffith said.

Next in the series: a historical look at education funding in the Silver State — and where Nevada has succeeded and failed.

Contact Meghin Delaney at mdelaney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0281. Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-483-4630. Follow @Meghindela­ney on Twitter. Follow @Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Kai Otterson smiles after Hudson Root successful­ly set up her wireless connection Wednesday at her Henderson home. Root started a community service project called Geeks for Seniors as a way to pair up...
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Kai Otterson smiles after Hudson Root successful­ly set up her wireless connection Wednesday at her Henderson home. Root started a community service project called Geeks for Seniors as a way to pair up...
 ?? Richard Brian ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Retiring Clark County School District Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky, left, says the way the state funds public education is wrong.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-journal @vegasphoto­graph Retiring Clark County School District Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky, left, says the way the state funds public education is wrong.

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