Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Why Billions More in CA School Spending Has Not Delivered Promised Results
By admin
Published 12 months ago on
May 21, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

When Jerry Brown returned to the governorship in 2011, a quarter-century after his first stint in California’s highest office ended, one of his early goals was changing how the state finances the education of nearly 6 million public school students.

Brown had a plan, adapted from the theory of Michael Kirst, a distinguished academic and Brown’s long-time education advisor, to concentrate more money on students who chronically trail in academic achievement, albeit those from poor families and/or don’t speak English at home.

Dan Walters with a serious expression

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

Kirst called it a “weighted formula,” and the legislation he and Brown persuaded the Legislature to adopt a decade ago was called “Local Control Funding Formula,” or LCFF. It would give school districts with large numbers of at-risk students in those two categories extra funds on the assumption that they would improve achievement.

The legislation lubricated passage by also eliminating most “categorical aids” – money for specific education programs – and thus giving local school officials more flexibility in spending money from local property taxes and state budget appropriations.

Over the last decade, Brown, successor Gavin Newsom and the Legislature have allocated tens of billions of dollars to LCFF in hopes of closing what educators call the achievement gap between the kids deemed to need extra instructional help – about 60% of public school enrollment – and their more privileged peers.

Has it worked? Follow up studies indicate that there may have been a slight narrowing of the gap, but whatever LCFF achieved vanished during the COVID-19 pandemic. At-risk kids were profoundly affected by school closures, since they had less ability to engage in remote learning, dubbed “Zoom school,” and less access to tutoring than more affluent families.

Failed to Deliver Transformative Impact

Pandemic impacts aside, LCFF has not delivered on its promised transformative impact. Even if spending more money would have narrowed the gap – an unproven theory – many school districts, particularly those in urban areas dominated by hardball politics, often fail to concentrate the extra funds on at-risk kids.

Brown insisted that the funds go to districts, not the specific schools where the targeted kids were most numerous, saying he trusted local educators to spend the money wisely. He dubbed it “subsidiarity,” adapting the term from an obscure theological theory.

Education reform groups have criticized Brown’s hands-off approach, saying local school systems need more oversight to prevent them from diverting LCFF funds to other purposes. However, in a recent podcast interview marking the formula’s 10th anniversary, Brown complained that districts have not been given enough flexibility.

“We spend too much time on not anything to do with teaching. Its accountability, its finance, its compliance. This is really a noxious evolution,” Brown said during the interview. “I hope that legislators be aware they’ve gone overboard … we have to look for the wise path.”

Meanwhile, in a separate 10th anniversary interview, Kirst said he regrets that local districts did not use subsidiarity’s flexibility to become more creative in educating kids who fall behind.

“This was their chance to get beyond formulaic budgets and the budget complexity to create a three-year budget plan with clear priorities,” Kirst lamented. “And generally, my impression is that they have not.”

Neither of LCFF’s two fathers offered any appraisal of whether children it purports to help have, in fact, been helped. That lack may indicate that both know LCFF – as implemented, not as envisioned – has not been a roaring success.

California has doubled the amount of per-pupil spending on schooling in the last decade but in national tests of academic achievement, the state still trails other states that spend much less, while state testing tells us that the achievement gap remains unacceptably wide.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

DON'T MISS

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

DON'T MISS

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

DON'T MISS

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

DON'T MISS

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

DON'T MISS

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

DON'T MISS

PUC’s Vote on Fixed Charge for Your Electric Bill Is Thursday. Will The Charge Keep Going Up?

DON'T MISS

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

DON'T MISS

RFK Jr. Says a Worm Ate Part of His Brain, but He’s Better Now

DON'T MISS

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Challenges Donald Trump to Debate at Libertarian Convention

UP NEXT

California Ban on Gas Appliances Started On Jan. 1 With ‘All Electric’ Rule

UP NEXT

CA Supreme Court to Hear High-Profile Case About Taxes

UP NEXT

Battle Over Marilyn Monroe’s Home: Preservation vs. Demolition

UP NEXT

CA Restaurants Shouldn’t Be Shocked That ‘Junk Fees’ Ban Applies to Them

UP NEXT

Did California’s Massive COVID Homeless Shelter Program Work? A New Evaluation Probes the Results

UP NEXT

How to Prepare Your Cellphone for a Protest

UP NEXT

California Reports the First Increase in Groundwater Supplies in 4 Years

UP NEXT

CA Limits How Police Respond to Protests. Why Were Bean Bag Shotguns Used at UCLA?

UP NEXT

Trump Surrogates Make a Dangerous Call for China Regime Change: Fareed Zakaria

UP NEXT

Pro-Palestinian Protesters at USC Comply With Order to Leave

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

45 mins ago

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

55 mins ago

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

1 hour ago

PUC’s Vote on Fixed Charge for Your Electric Bill Is Thursday. Will The Charge Keep Going Up?

Business /

2 hours ago

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

2 hours ago

RFK Jr. Says a Worm Ate Part of His Brain, but He’s Better Now

3 hours ago

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Challenges Donald Trump to Debate at Libertarian Convention

4 hours ago

Do You Love the Holiday Classic ‘Home Alone’? This Is Fresno’s Chance to Remake It.

4 hours ago

Sparks Move Home Game Against Caitlin Clark From Long Beach to Downtown LA

5 hours ago

California Schools Can’t Keep Pace with Utility Bills. Lawmakers Must Fix New Solar Rules.

5 hours ago

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

Fresno City College has announced the seven graduating students chosen by their division dean for a Dean Medallion and also the alumnus who ...
Local Education /

2 mins ago

Local Education /
2 mins ago

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

16 mins ago

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

40 mins ago

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

45 mins ago

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

55 mins ago

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

1 hour ago

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

Business /
2 hours ago

PUC’s Vote on Fixed Charge for Your Electric Bill Is Thursday. Will The Charge Keep Going Up?

2 hours ago

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend