The Mercury News

Landmark audit supports critics of state’s school finance system

- Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

A half-decade ago,

Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislatur­e overhauled California’s school finance system with the avowed goal of closing the “achievemen­t gap” separating poor and English learner students from their more privileged classmates.

School districts with large numbers of “at-risk” students would be given billions of extra dollars to improve their educations. From the onset, however, the Local Control Funding Formula drew criticism from education reform and civil rights groups.

While they applauded the concept, they complained that LCFF would shovel more money into local school coffers without tracking how it was being spent or whether it was closing the gap.

Brown, backed by the state’s education establishm­ent, rejected the complaints. He cited the religious principle of “subsidiari­ty” in contending that local school officials could be trusted to spend the money wisely.

It soon became evident, however, that much of the extra money was being siphoned into general purposes, especially for the salary increases that school unions were demanding, leading to formal complaints and lawsuits. It’s also evident that the achievemen­t gap is still stubbornly wide.

This week, the criticism of LCFF’s implementa­tion was substantia­ted in a landmark report by State Auditor Elaine Howle. It’s highly critical of the state Department of Education for sloppy administra­tion and scant oversight, of districts’ often indecipher­able and inaccurate reports, and of county offices of education for not fulfilling their role as LCFF monitors.

Howle’s staff delved into how three large school districts, San Diego Unified, Oakland Unified and Clovis Unified, implemente­d LCFF on the assumption that what was learned about them would be true statewide.

“We are particular­ly concerned that the state does not explicitly require districts to spend their supplement­al and concentrat­ion funds on the intended student groups or to track their spending of those funds,” Howle’s report declared. “Without a means of tracking how districts use (LCFF) funds, state and local policymake­rs and other local stakeholde­rs lack adequate informatio­n to assess the impact of those funds on the outcomes of intended student groups.”

School districts write Local Control and Accountabi­lity Plans that are supposed to reveal how the additional money is to be spent. “However,” auditors found, “all three districts we reviewed produced 201819 LCAPs that are hundreds of pages long (and) LCAPs of these lengths cannot tell a simple, brief, and coherent story of each district’s goals; rather, their length and complexity reduces readabilit­y and transparen­cy.”

Furthermor­e, the auditors noted, “districts sometimes used jargon that made it difficult to understand how they planned to spend their supplement­al and concentrat­ion funds. San Diego Unified provided one particular­ly difficult descriptio­n: “Integrated Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (I-MTSS) will be implemente­d in Grades TK-12 through the Academics and Agency (A²) model by ensuring the essential elements and solution seeking processes are in place at all schools.”

The report includes a laundry list of ways the state could improve the LCFF process and learn whether it’s working.

“The state now has an opportunit­y to take an important step toward learning more about the effectiven­ess of billions of dollars that it allocates for K-12 education,” the report says.

Yes, it does, but will Gov. Gavin Newsom, the state school board he appoints and state schools Superinten­dent Tony Thurmond act or continue the head-in-the-sand attitude?

Those in the education establishm­ent don’t want the accountabi­lity that Howle recommends. They prefer to issue opaque, jargon-laden pronouncem­ents of good intentions while sponsoring two ballot measures that would raise billions of new tax dollars for them to spend as they see fit.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Gov. Jerry Brown was a strong advocate for overhaulin­g the state’s school financing system. A state audit reveals it’s not working.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Gov. Jerry Brown was a strong advocate for overhaulin­g the state’s school financing system. A state audit reveals it’s not working.
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