The Desert Sun

State’s deficit revives war over school funding

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Financial support for the nearly 6 million students in California’s public schools is not only the largest chunk of the state budget, but for the past half-century it has been its most contentiou­s element. This year is no exception as Gov. Gavin Newsom faces stiff opposition from the education establishm­ent for a new fiscal maneuver to cope with a massive budget deficit.

A bit of history places it in context.

Until the 1970s, local school systems were financed almost entirely from property taxes. Since the amount of taxable property varied widely from district to district, so did their revenues. Districts with high levels of commercial and industrial property could generate large amounts of revenue with low rates, but those with little taxable property other than housing had to impose high rates.

In 1971, the state Supreme Court declared that the disparity unconstitu­tionally “discrimina­tes against the poor because it makes the quality of a child’s education a function of the wealth of his parents and neighbors.” The state was ordered to adopt “equalizati­on” in state aid to reduce the difference­s and it immediatel­y became an annual budget issue.

In 1975, Jerry Brown’s first year as governor, Republican­s blocked passage of his budget, demanding more equalizati­on money because schools in GOPleaning suburbs, lacking big commercial or industrial properties, were often on the short end of the disparity. The game changed again in 1978 when voters passed Propositio­n 13, imposing tight limits on property taxes. The state responded with a bailout to prop up schools and local government­s as property tax revenues plummeted. With the state having become the primary source of school support, education groups in 1988 sponsored another ballot measure, Propositio­n 98, creating a very complex formula to determine schools’ share of the budget. Prop. 98 did not, however, stop the political infighting.

A few years after Prop. 98’s passage, for instance, then-Gov. Pete Wilson and the Legislatur­e created the Educationa­l Revenue Augmentati­on Fund, which diverted more local property tax money to schools, therefore reducing the required appropriat­ion from a state budget leaking red ink. It forced local government­s to eat a multibilli­on-dollar shortfall that was later bridged by a state sales tax increase.

This year’s version is another rob-Peter-to-payPaul maneuver that would remove $8.8 billion in overpaymen­ts of state aid from previous years from the budget and treat it, in effect, as a off-the-books loan to be written off over five years. Concurrent­ly the state would tap a special education reserve fund for $8.5 billion.

Gabe Petek, the Legislatur­e’s budget analyst, has been highly critical of this maneuver, saying it is “bad fiscal policy, sets a problemati­c precedent, and creates a binding obligation on the state that will worsen out-year deficits and require more difficult decisions.”

The education establishm­ent is even more critical. “This maneuver may seem innocuous on its face — or even generous — as it could ease the pain of the 2024–25 budget,” the California School Boards Associatio­n declared. “Yet, in reality, this sleight of hand would reduce education funding by tens of billions of dollars in the years to come and remove the funding safety net Propositio­n 98 has provided schools for more than three decades.”

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