When the long-awaited school funding simulations were
released Friday by state Reps. John Patterson, D-Ashtabula, and Robert Cupp,
R-Lima, for their Fair education funding plan, people didn’t really know how to
respond. Yes, it called for an annual spending increase of $718 million
statewide for schools.
That’s good.
But did Ohio’s suburban districts need to swallow up more
than 1/3 of that increase while the state’s biggest urban districts only got 5
percent of the increase? And flat funding Northern Local in Perry County – the district
that originally sued the state over its failure to properly fund education? How
is that “fair”, as the plan’s authors claimed?
Something didn’t seem right. The formula Cupp and Patterson
talked about made sense. Figure out what students need. Then fund it. The
elements they picked (teachers, mental health, etc.) all made sense.
So why were wealthy, suburban districts getting more than
1/3 of the increase?
One explanation is that Ohio has held down increases in
suburban districts through so-called “gain caps” for years. This allowed the state to continue investing
in districts that couldn’t raise local revenue – not enough state investment
there, by the way, but this Robin-Hooding has happened for decades.
So if you’re eliminating gain caps – one of the hallmarks of
the Cupp Patterson plan – you’re going to see large increases in districts that
have been capped for years. In many ways, you are essentially making up for
30-40 years of Robin Hooding.
But the issue is more complicated than that.
Ten years ago, I was in the exact same position as Cup and
Patterson. I was the chair (they are co-chairs) of the Primary and Secondary
Education Subcommittee of the House Finance and Appropriations Committee when
then-Gov. Ted Strickland introduced the Evidence Based Model of school funding –
the state’s first real attempt to cost out education and pay for it since the
Ohio Supreme Court ordered the state to do so in 1997.
In much the same way as Cupp-Patterson, the original EBM initially
poured millions into wealthy, suburban districts while doing much less,
relatively speaking, in poorer districts.
Yet by the time the formula left the House and eventually
became law for a couple years, the plan did the best job of distributing
revenue to the most needy districts the state had ever seen. And it won the prestigious
Frank Newman Award from the
bipartisan Education Commission of the States.
What happened?
We found Han Solo.
Let me explain.
I have always contended that the reason the Star Wars
prequels failed to garner the widespread love of the original three was because
the second prequel didn’t have Han Solo (or a character like him) – a wisecracking,
street smart character who didn’t quite buy all this Jedi/Force/Destiny stuff.
He was grounded in the real world. He was the guy audience members who weren’t
buying the magical part of the movies could relate to.
You didn’t need to believe in the Force to believe in Han
Solo. Because Han Solo was us.
Back to school funding.
The EBM’s Han Solo was the Education Challenge Factor – an index
that calculated a school district’s extra-curricular challenges (and I don’t
mean football teams). It took into account a district’s relative poverty and
its parents’ educational attainment level – what we’ve known for years is the
single most important determinant of a student’s success.
Those were merged into a number that we applied to many of the formula
elements.
The ECF did a lot of the heavy lifting for the EBM –
leveling out a lot of the original inequities in the formula.
The Cupp Patterson formula doesn’t have a similar mechanism
to account for the more difficult challenges districts that are poor and whose
students don’t have much support from parents face in finding talent and
overcoming those barriers, especially in districts that are the most challenged.
So, for example, the Cupp Patterson plan assumes it will be
just as easy to find the mental health professionals the formula envisions in
Olentangy, Cleveland and New Boston. And those professionals will be equally
successful in all those places.
That’s probably not an accurate assessment.
What effect would the ECF have on the Cupp Patterson plan? I’m
not going to use dollar figures here because I don’t know which elements of the
formula the authors would want to apply it to. And I’m using ECF figures from
10 years ago. I don’t want to suggest that Cupp and Patterson have to figure
out how to find even more money than
they currently have.
However, what I can
do is show how the distributions work under the current Cupp Patterson plan and
how it would work if you applied the 10-year-old ECF to all of a district’s
funding (which is not how it would
work, but this is just an exercise). Here’s the result:
What you’ll see is that instead of only receiving 5 percent
of the formula’s benefit, the state’s Big 8 Urban districts (Akron, Canton,
Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and Youngstown) would see about
¼ of the benefit with an ECF. Likewise, poor, rural and small town districts
would see about 1/3 of the benefit.
Meanwhile, the state’s wealthiest suburban districts would
see a small bump, or even a slight cut, depending on the category.
I want to be extremely clear: I am not saying this is
how the distribution should look.
What I am saying
is that this is a lot closer to what a fair
distribution resembles. And since this is being dubbed the “Fair” education
funding plan, it would appear that an ECF-like mechanism could
significantly improve its fairness.
As this formula works its way through the legislature, it is
important to realize that the funding simulations released Friday will change.
That’s a given. And there are major challenges to find the additional revenue
the plan calls for.
The only way to ensure that the most benefit goes to the
most in need of those resources is to do what the Cupp Patterson plan states as
a goal – develop a fair education funding formula.
The current plan does the best job since EBM of calculating the elements of student need.
What the plan is missing is Han Solo -- something to bring everyone around to it. But there’s still time to
release him from the carbonite.
You just have to march into Jabba’s Palace and do it.