San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Schools risk huge loss of funds as enrollment drops

- By Joe Hong Joe Hong writes for CalMatters a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics.

As they await the release of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed 2022-23 state budget, school district officials across California are worried about losing millions of dollars all at once, resulting in staffing cuts in a time when students need more attention than ever.

After two years of not being penalized for declining enrollment during the pandemic, school districts are bracing for a sudden drop in revenue next year as their funding gets recalibrat­ed to match current enrollment, which plummeted since COVID-19 first closed California’s schools.

“I’ve never ever seen a drop in enrollment come all at once like this,” said Andy Johnsen, superinten­dent at San Marcos Unified in north San Diego County. “The pandemic changed everything.”

In 2020, state lawmakers decided to allow districts to use their prepandemi­c, 2019-20 enrollment and attendance figures to calculate their funding for the next two school years. But starting in the fall of 2022, funding levels will be determined by this year’s enrollment and attendance.

“Just to put it into perspectiv­e, we lost a few hundred students each year before the pandemic,” said Harold Sullins, an associate superinten­dent

School districts are bracing for a sudden drop in revenue in the fall as their funding gets recalibrat­ed to match current enrollment.

at San Bernardino City Unified School District. “Last year, we declined by 2,000 students. That’s about eight years’ worth of decline.”

Without assistance from the state, San Bernardino City Unified could lose $27 million in funding due to the enrollment decline, a hefty chunk of the district’s $971 million budget. Districts statewide stand to take similar blows.

The impact of such cuts can vary by district. It could mean laying off employees or cutting language and art programs. Ultimately, it will mean eliminatin­g services many students need, especially in the coming years as they try to recover

from the challenges of virtual learning.

In 2018-19, California schools statewide lost about 23,000 students. Between the 2019-20 and 2020-21 school years, public school enrollment in California dropped by nearly seven times that figure, with more than 160,000 students dropping out.

To calculate what it pays to individual districts each year, the state uses average daily attendance, so not only does enrollment matter but so does making sure students are in class every day. A new bill introduced on Monday by state Sen. Anthony Portantino, a San Fernando Valley Democrat, seeks to change this policy and fund schools based on enrollment, which would generate $3 billion for schools statewide.

Before COVID-19, low birth rates and migration patterns caused the annual

shrinkage of public school enrollment. During the pandemic, kindergart­en enrollment fell by about 61,000 students, accounting for much of the overall decline.

“Kindergart­en is not compulsory,” Sullins said. “At our earlier grade levels, a lot of our parents opted to hold their students back.”

When physical classrooms reopened in the fall of 2021, stringent rules about quarantine and independen­t study also hurt attendance. Districts failing to offer independen­t study to students in quarantine were required to count those pupils as absent, losing out on their attendance-based funding. Sullins said this policy had a “tremendous impact” on attendance rates.

District leaders said a sudden drop in funding would punish districts for both drops in enrollment caused by the pandemic and for failing to comply with unreasonab­le independen­t study requiremen­ts.

“The public doesn’t understand,” said Lisa Gonzales, the chief business officer at Mount Diablo Unified. “We’re all facing colossal funding decreases next year.”

Gonzales said her 30,000-student, Northern California district could lose $24 million if the state does nothing.

Gonzales declined to comment on exactly where the district would make cuts, but she said she expects to issue layoff notices.

Administra­tors interviewe­d by CalMatters raised several possible solutions, but they fell under two general categories — and seek to take advantage of the fact that the state anticipate­s a big budget surplus.

First, the state could increase overall funding to schools by adjusting the formula that determines most of the money districts receive from the state. The formula consists of “base” funding for all students and additional “supplement­al” and “concentrat­ion” grants for districts serving English learners, foster children and students qualifying for free or reduced-price meals.

A second option: The state could cut funding gradually, giving districts more time to downsize.

A spokespers­on for the governor declined to comment on the contents of the forthcomin­g proposed budget. The state Legislatur­e is aware of the fiscal crisis looming over districts.

Mike Fine, the chief executive officer of the state’s Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, spoke at a Nov. 30 hearing for the state Assembly’s Education Finance Subcommitt­ee and recommende­d that districts be temporaril­y funded based on their three-year average attendance rates.

Fine said that prepandemi­c, about 60% of districts were declining. Last year, all but one of the 58 counties in the state had a decline.

The governor and Legislatur­e have tried to help districts recover from the pandemic. The 2021-22 state budget ushered historic investment­s in K-12 education. Much of that went to ongoing funding like sending more money to districts with higher concentrat­ions of at-risk students.

Jonathan Kaplan, a senior policy analyst at the California Budget & Policy Center, said these commitment­s signal that lawmakers in Sacramento are aware of just how hard some communitie­s were hit by COVID-19.

Even so, both the state and local districts underestim­ated just how low enrollment­s and attendance rates would plummet this year.

“Could they have really known there was going to be such large numbers of students who weren’t coming?” Kaplan said. “Could they really know how much hardship there would be? I don’t think so.”

 ?? Dave Woody / CalMatters 2019 ??
Dave Woody / CalMatters 2019

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