SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
SENATE
SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 2336
As Amended by Senate Committee on
Education
Brief
(1)
Senate Sub. for HB 2336 modifies
the school finance formula and addresses other education policy
matters. The main provisions are described below:
School Formula
Changes
- Base State Aid Per Pupil
(BSAPP). BSAPP is increased from $3,820 in the 2000-01
school year to $3,870 in 2001-02 and thereafter.
- At-Risk Pupils.
The at-risk pupil weighting is increased from 0.09 in the 2000-01
school year to 10.0 in 2001-02 and thereafter. An amount equal to
0.01 will be used by the district for achieving mastery of basic
reading skills by completion of the third grade in accordance with
standards established by the State Board of Education. A school
district must include information in its at-risk pupil assistance
plan as the State Board of Education requires about the district's
remediation strategies and its results in achieving the State
Board's third grade reading mastery standards. A school district's
report must include information documenting remediation strategies
and improvement made by pupils who performed below the expected
standard on the State Board's second grade diagnostic reading test.
A school district whose third grade pupils substantially meet the
State Board standards for mastery of third grade reading skills,
upon request, may be released by the Board from the requirement to
dedicate a specific portion of the at-risk weight to this reading
initiative.
- Four Year Old At-Risk
Pupils. The four year old at-risk pupil competitive grant
program is expanded by 436 pupils--from 2,230 in the 2000-01 school
year to 2,666 in 2001-02 and thereafter.
- Local Option Budget (LOB)
Enhancement. The amount of state special education
services categorical aid a school district receives during the
current school year is converted to a pupil weighting for purposes
of determining the State Financial Aid of a school district (the
school district's general fund budget). This is accomplished by
dividing the amount of state special education services aid the
district receives by BSAPP and treating the result as an additional
number of weighted pupils of the district. In turn, an amount equal
to the amount attributable to the weighting is defined as "local
effort" and, therefore, as a deduction in computing the general
state aid entitlement of the district.
The amount of
state special education services aid the district receives is
deposited to the school district general fund and then must be
transferred to the district's special education fund. This
procedure is aimed at increasing the size of a school district's
general fund budget for purposes of the LOB calculation.
- Juvenile Detention
Facilities. School districts receive state aid equal to
the lesser of actual costs of educational services provided to
children in juvenile detention facilities or two times BSAPP. Three
additional facilities - Liberty Juvenile Services and Treatment
(Wichita USD 259), King's Achievement Center (Goddard USD 265), and
Clarence M. Kelly Transitional Living Center (Topeka) - are added
to the listing of facilities that qualify for this program. The
provision becomes effective upon publication in the Kansas
Register.
Other Education Policy
Changes/Initiatives
- School Finance Study. The State Board of
Education is directed to provide for a professional evaluation of
school district finance to determine the per pupil cost of a
suitable education for Kansas children. This evaluation must
include a thorough study of the current school finance law with the
objective of addressing any inherent inadequacies and inequities.
Also, this evaluation must address:
- The funding
needed to provide a suitable education in typical K-12 schools of
various sizes and locations;
- The additional
support needed for special education, at-risk, limited English
proficient pupils, and pupils impacted by other special
circumstances;
- The funding
adjustments necessary to ensure comparable purchasing power for all
districts, regardless of size or location; and
- An appropriate
annual adjustment for inflation.
The evaluation
must cover the costs of providing:
- Comparable
opportunities in the state's small rural schools as well as the
larger, more urban schools, including differences in transportation
needs resulting from population sparsity as well as differences in
annual operating costs;
- Suitable
opportunities in elementary, middle, and high schools;
- Special
programming opportunities, including vocational education
programs;
- Education of
at-risk children and those with limited English
proficiency;
- Meeting the
needs of pupils with disabilities; and
- Geographic
variations in costs of personnel, materials, supplies and
equipment, and other fixed costs so that districts across the state
are afforded comparable purchasing power.
The State Board
of Education will secure consultant services to conduct this
evaluation. The consultant will report findings and recommendations
to the Governor and the Legislature at the beginning of the 2002
Legislative Session.
For the purpose
of this legislation, the term "suitable education" means a
curricular program consisting of the subjects and courses required
under KSA 72-1101, 72-1103, and 72-1117, and amendments, the
courses in foreign language, fine arts, and physical education
required to qualify for a state scholarship under KSA 72-6810
through 72-6816, and amendments, and the courses included in the
precollege curriculum prescribed by the Board of Regents under KSA
76-717, and amendments.
- School
Efficiency Audit. The State Board of Education will
provide for a school efficiency audit of expenditures of school
districts to determine if the public school system could be
operated in a more cost effective manner. The audit will focus
on:
- financial
management;
- acquisition of
goods and services;
- operational
efficiencies;
- linkage of
expenditures to performance;
- effective
deployment of licensed and classified personnel; and
- facilities
management.
The State Board
will submit its report to the Governor and the Legislature at the
beginning of the 2002 Session.
- Compulsory
School Attendance Requirement--Extension. The bill permits
a school district to adopt a policy that extends the school term
for pupils in need of remediation or for disciplinary
purposes.
A school
district board may adopt a disciplinary policy or school
improvement plan which includes additional school time for pupils
who are in need of remedial education or who are subject to
disciplinary measures imposed under the district's disciplinary
policy. Any school day or school hour scheduled for a pupil under
such a policy may be scheduled on weekends, before or after regular
school hours, and during the summer months. Inexcusable absence
from school on any school day or during any school hour by a pupil
for whom additional school days or school hours have been scheduled
under the policy is counted as an inexcusable absence from school
for the purposes of enforcing the compulsory school attendance
law.
- School
District and Community College Board Contributions to Tax Sheltered
Annuities. School district and community college governing
boards are authorized to contribute an amount to match an
employee's tax sheltered annuity. The employer's matching amount
may not exceed the employee's contribution.
Taxes
- Uniform
Property Tax Levy. The uniform school district property
tax rate of 20 mills and the $20,000 residential exemption are
continued for 2001 and 2002.
Background
HB 2336, as introduced,
proposed to
increase the Local Option Budget (LOB) cap from 25.0 percent to
30.0 percent in the 2001-02 school year, to 33.0 percent in the
2002-03 school year, and to 35.0 percent in the 2003-04 school
year. All LOB authority would then expire on June 30,
2004.
The House
Education Committee amended the bill to do the
following:
- Cap the LOB at
30.0 percent;
- Eliminate the
expiration provision;
- Require an
election on an increase in LOB authority above the 25.0 percent
threshold; and
- Prohibit
payment of supplemental general state aid beyond the district's
entitlement at the level of a 25.0 percent LOB.
The bill was amended by the House
Committee of the Whole to require, beginning July
1, 2001, that school districts collect financial data so that they
are able to report income and expenditures in the following
categories:
- Income
received from all federal, state, and local sources whether of
private or public origin;
- Expenditures
for direct instruction costs in each classroom;
- Expenditures
in each building for indirect instruction costs, for
extracurricular activities, and for operating costs;
- Expenditures
for district-level administration and related administrative
expenditures;
- Expenditures
from each of the special funds; and
- All other
expenditures.
These data
would be reported to the State Department of Education by September
1 of each year.
These
provisions were removed by the Senate Education Committee and
replaced with the school finance provisions described in the
brief. The
provisions described in this brief reflect the second series of
recommendations of the Senate Committee on Education pertaining to
HB 2336. One of the Senate Education Committee actions has
been to add to this bill the contents of HB 2094, as amended by the
Senate Education Committee, relating to funding of educational
services at juvenile detention facilities. The estimated added cost
to the state for adding the three facilities contained in that
measure is shown below.
Facility
|
FY 2001
|
FY 2002
|
|
|
|
Liberty |
$100,000 |
$131,500 |
King's |
N/A |
131,500 |
Clarence M.
Kelly |
70,000 |
175,304 |
|
|
|
As of April 18, 2001, the State
Department of Education estimated the FY 2001 appropriations for
this program are sufficient to cover the added costs associated
with these facilities. Additional funding needed in FY 2002 is
shown on the table (above).
Following is a summary of the
fiscal components contained in the Senate Education Committee plan.
They are the Governor's initial recommendation to the 2001
Legislature.
Senate Education
Committee Plan/
Governor's Original
Plan: FY 2002
(Amounts in
Millions)
|
|
Policy
|
Proposal
|
|
|
BSAPP |
Change |
$3,870 |
Amount |
$28.7 |
|
At-Risk |
Change |
0.09 to
0.10 |
Amount |
$4.2 |
|
Four Year Old
At-Risk Pupils |
Change |
2,230 to
2,666 |
Amount |
$1.0 |
|
Special
Education |
Change |
current
formula - but converted to a pupil weighting |
Amount |
85.3% excess
cost $8.0 |
|
Studies |
Change |
adequacy
study
accountability study
|
Amount |
$0.45 |
|
|
INCREASE |
SGF |
$41.4 |
Children's Initiative
Fund |
1.0
|
TOTAL |
$42.4 |
|
|
Shown below is proposed funding
necessary for the local option budget (LOB). The Senate Education
Committee plan produces a somewhat higher estimate of costs to the
state for LOB's than the original proposal of the Governor (by $1.6
million). These amounts are shown below.
FY
2002
(Amounts
in Millions)
|
|
|
|
Governor's
Initial
Proposal
|
|
|
Supplemental
General State Aid (LOB) |
$12.5 |
KPERS-School |
17.2*
|
TOTAL |
$29.7
|
|
* Estimate
exceeds actual recommendation by $0.8 million. |
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi