Distribution of State Aid to Michigan Schools

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Distribution of State Aid to Michigan Schools Webinar Presentation Craig Thiel, Director of State Affairs August, 2011

About The Citizens Research Council Founded in 1916 Statewide Nonpartisan Private not-for-profit Promotes sound policy for state and local governments through factual research Relies on charitable contributions from Michigan foundations, businesses, organizations, and individuals 2

CRC s Education Project CRC s education study is funded in part by: 3 The W. K. Kellogg Foundation The Frey Foundation The PNC Foundation ArvinMeritor The Richard C. and Barbara C. Van Dusen Family Fund A consortium of education groups including: the Tri-County Alliance for Public Education, Michigan Association of School Boards, Metropolitan Detroit Bureau of School Studies, Inc., Michigan Association of School Administrators, Michigan School Business Officials, Middle Cities Education Association, Michigan Association of Intermediate School Administrators, Michigan PTSA, Michigan Association of Secondary School Principals, and the Michigan Elementary and Middle School Principals Association.

Overview of Topics to Cover Proposal A and the foundation grant s origins Growth of different foundation grants Enrollment changes Per-pupil funding equalization Growth in total foundation revenue Towards further equalization and effects on academic performance 4

Basics of the Foundation Grant Created under 1994 s Proposal A finance reforms amount of $ per pupil specific to each district Initial grant (1995) based on 1994 per-pupil $ Three grants: minimum, target and maximum Funded through combination of local tax (required) and state aid Primary mechanism used by policymakers to equalize per-pupil general operating revenue across districts Provides vast majority of operating funding; but districts receive categorical aid (state and federal $) 5

Fiscal Factors Affecting Annual Changes Initially Strong State and Local Revenue Growth 190 Index (FY1995 = 100) 180 170 160 150 140 130 120 Non-Homestead TV State SAF Revenue Basic Grant 110 100 FY1995 FY1996 FY1997 FY1998 FY1999 FY2000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 6 Since FY2003 state revenue growth slows

Great Recession s Effects Severe Steep Declines and Slow Recovery Sales Income Use State Education Real Estate Transfer School Aid Fund annual growth rates FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 3.4% -10.1% 1.4% 12.2% -19.0% -5.5% -0.3% -19.2% 9.3% -0.1% -1.9% -5.4% -28.5% -26.2% -3.0% 3.2% -5.1% -1.0% FY2011 5.2% 12.5% -5.5% -4.1% 2.8% 2.7% Basic Foundation Grant 1.4% 1.6% -2.1% 0.0% FY2011 SAF down $680 million from FY2008 7 Note: FY2011 projected rates from Consensus Revenue Estimating Conference

State Budget Problems Spill Over Support for Schools Reduced (Millions) $800 $600 $400 $200 $- $(200) $(400) $(600) $(800) FY1995 General Fund Transfers and Cost Shifts - School Aid Fund $625 FY1997 effect of increasing income tax earmark to SAF FY1999 $420 GF Transfer FY2001 FY2003 FY2005 FY2007 Shifts to SAF FY2009 FY2011 $119 $(635) 8 Source: Michigan Department of Education; House Fiscal Agency

Demographic Factors Since FY2003 Era of Declining Enrollments 1,800,000 1,750,000 Statewide Enrollments and Foundation Pupil Memberships 1,750,631 1,700,000 1,650,000 1,600,000 1,603,344 1,550,000 1,500,000 FY1995 FY1996 FY1997 FY1998 FY1999 FY2000 FY2001 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 enrollments memberships 9

Methods Used to Annually Adjust Foundation Grants Policies aimed at raising the bottom 2X formula and sliding scale Separate equity payments Uniform adjustments Same increases/decreases Funding reductions for those at the top Elimination of hold harmless payments (Sec. 20j) 10

Growth of Foundation Grants A Look at the Two Extremes Minimum Maximum $10,000 $10,000 $8,814 $8,951 $8,385 $8,000 $5,695 $7,459 $6,500 $7,108 $8,000 $6,500 $7,800 $6,000 $6,000 $4,200 $4,000 $4,000 F Y1 9 9 5 F Y1 9 9 7 F Y1 9 9 9 nominal dollars F Y2 0 0 1 F Y2 0 0 3 FY2007 dollars F Y2 0 0 5 F Y2 0 0 7 F Y1 99 5 F Y1 9 9 7 F Y1 9 9 9 nominal dollars F Y2 00 1 F Y2 0 0 3 FY2007 dollars F Y2 0 0 5 F Y2 00 7 11 Min. sees nominal and real growth; max. no real growth

Real Values of Foundation Grants Deteriorate Over the Past Decade $10,000 $9,164 Maximum $8,335 $8,000 $7,255 Basic $7,162 $6,000 $4,000 FY2000 FY2002 FY2004 FY2006 FY2008 FY2010 12 basic (2010$) maximum (2010$)

Effect of Retirement System Contribution Rate Changes on Basic Grant $8,500 $8,211 $8,000 $7,500 $7,358 $8,095 $7,000 $6,678 $6,500 $6,345 $6,000 13 Rate Change (2011$) No Rate Change (2011$) Since FY2005 contribution rate grew faster than grant

Annual Enrollment Changes in Traditional Public School Districts Number of Districts 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 300 253 315 237 333 218 358 193 392 159 406 145 100 50 0 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 declining growing 14 75% experienced some enrollment loss in FY2009

Degree of Enrollment Change Varies Not Limited to Central City Schools Enrollment Changes in Traditional Public School Districts: FY1995 to FY2009 Number of Percent of Total Percent of Enrollment Change Districts Districts Enrollment Students Decline >33% 50 9.1 141,553 9.4 Decline 10% to 33% 186 33.8 339,183 22.4 Decline 0.1% to 10% 98 17.8 245,087 16.2 Subtotal 334 60.7 725,823 48.0 Increase 0% to 10% 87 15.8 283,431 18.7 Increase 10% to 33% 83 15.1 293,493 19.4 Increase > 33% 47 8.5 210,857 13.9 Subtotal 217 39.3 787,781 52.0 15 1/3 of districts had losses of 10% or more

Responses to Declining Enrollments Changes to the blended membership count Place more emphasis on prior year count Smooth enrollment losses in declining districts, but does not allow growing districts to realize the full benefit of year-over-year increases FY2012 change from 75/25 (current/prior) blend to 90/10 blend Provide categorical funding Significant proration reduces the effectiveness Funding eliminated in FY2012 16

Changes in Total Foundation Revenue Enrollment Losses Negate Foundation Grant Growth Changes in Enrollment, Foundation Grant, and Total Foundation Revenue by District Type: FY1995 to FY2009 (FY2009 Dollars) Total Enrollment Real Foundation Grant Foundation Revenue Decline Gain Decline Gain Decline Gain City 18 8 19 7 18 8 Suburban 47 102 93 56 56 93 Rural 269 107 80 296 199 177 Total 334 217 192 359 273 278 50% experienced inflation-adjusted revenue decline 17

Some Larger Districts Experienced the Worst of Both Worlds Changes in Enrollment, Foundation Grant, and Total Revenue in Urban Districts: FY1995 to FY2009 Total Percentage of District Real Foundation Statewide Enrollment Foundation Revenue Enrollment Change Change Change Flint 0.9% -44.8% -1.6% -45.7% Benton Harbor 0.2% -43.8% 12.4% -36.8% Pontiac 0.5% -42.6% -1.5% -43.5% Detroit 6.2% -40.3% -2.9% -42.0% Grand Rapids 1.2% -28.0% 1.2% -27.1% Lansing 1.0% -27.3% -1.0% -28.0% Saginaw 0.6% -27.0% -2.3% -28.7% Muskegon 0.3% -23.8% 1.3% -22.8% Battle Creek 0.4% -22.6% -1.7% -23.9% Jackson 0.4% -18.4% -0.7% -18.9% Highland Park 0.2% -13.9% -4.3% -17.6% Bay City 0.6% -13.0% 16.8% 1.7% 18

Reducing Funding Disparities A Key Objective of Reforms Clear and major policy focus following Proposal A Greatest gains achieved early on Use of 2X formula to raise the bottom Series of years when districts received no increase or uniform increase Recently, some gains achieved through funding cuts for high revenue districts (Sec. 20j) Result in different foundation growth rates 19

Evidence of Funding Equalization Per-Pupil Revenue Differences at the Extremes $14,000 $12,000 $10,000 $10,294 $10,454 $11,154 $12,170 $8,000 $6,000 $4,000 $2,762 $4,200 $5,700 $7,162 $2,000 $0 FY1994 FY1995 FY2000 FY2010* Effective Minimum Effective Maximum 20 * FY2010 includes the effects of the $154 per pupil reduction for all districts (minimum and maximum) and the hold harmless/sec. 20j veto reduction for select districts (maximum).

Greater Equalization Has Resulted in Different Growth Rates Inflation-Adjusted Average Foundation Grants by Student Group Change Change Change FY1994 - FY2000 - FY1994 Quintile FY1994 FY2000 FY2009 FY2000 FY2009 FY2009 1 - low $6,065 $7,135 $7,322 $1,070 $187 $1,257 2 $6,760 $7,152 $7,325 $391 $173 $564 3 $7,452 $7,570 $7,498 $119 ($73) $46 4 $7,964 $7,997 $7,816 $33 ($181) ($147) 5 - high $10,319 $9,981 $9,255 ($338) ($726) ($1,064) Diff. = Q5 - Q1 $4,254 $2,846 $1,933 60% of students experienced a decline in the value of grant 21

Revenue Growth and District Wealth In general, poorer districts experienced greater revenue growth than wealthier districts However, the poorest districts did not receive the greatest increases under Proposal A Some of the poorest districts had higher perpupil revenue pre-proposal A Middle-income districts had below-ave. revenue because of lower tax effort and state aid 22

Revenue Growth and Racial Composition Inflation-Adjusted Foundation Grants by Percent of African American Students Percent of District Dollar Percent African American FY1994 FY2009 Change Change 0% to 1% $6,902 $7,599 $698 10.1% 1% to 5% $6,970 $7,536 $566 8.1% 5% to 33% $8,031 $8,014 ($17) -0.2% > 33% $8,334 $8,088 ($246) -3.0% Districts with higher concentrations of minorities lost ground 23

Addressing Wealth Disparities State Categorical Funding At-Risk Eligible Percent of Appropriation Free Lunch Number of Statutory Per-Pupil (millions) Students Districts Maximum Proration FY2003 $ 302.2 458,997 675 90.6% $ 73 FY2004 $ 314.2 479,275 684 87.1% $ 99 FY2005 $ 310.4 498,390 701 83.1% $130 FY2006 $ 310.5 510,273 707 77.7% $176 FY2007 $ 310.5 508,562 714 74.9% $206 FY2008 $ 310.5 528,898 715 70.9% $242 FY2009 $ 309.0 531,842 719 69.8% $254 FY2010 $ 309.0 555,832 741 64.9% $321 24 Declining $ + Growing Demand = Significant Proration

Towards Further Funding Equalization Should this be the policy going forward? What is involved with this? Method and how to proceed? What level? Timeframe and how soon? Fiscal constraints? Relationship between funding equalization and student academic achievement 25

Equalization and Student Performance Michigan s Experiment Research conducted by MSU economics professor Leslie Papke, Ph.D. Largest improvements scores in those districts with greatest funding increases 10% real increase yielded improvement in pass rates 2% Occurred during early years of Proposal A, when equalization gains greatest Fairly significant funding increase needed to achieve modest gains Since early 2000s, inflation-adjusted declines in foundation grants Do not know if the relationship works in the reverse with recent funding cuts 26

Questions and Discussion

Thank You CRC Publications available at www.crcmich.org Providing Independent, Nonpartisan Public Policy Research Since 1916 28 28