Rebell Criticizes Mayor's New Funding Formula in Daily News
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Mike's flawed school funding fix
By MICHAEL REBELL
Daily News Op-Ed
Thursday, January 25th, 2007
The plan unveiled last week by Mayor Bloomberg for further restructuring of the
New York City school system has many good points, but the proposal to alter the
city's school financing system is not one of them.
The mayor is proposing an
approach called Fair Student Funding (FSF), under which many city funding
streams would be replaced by a single sum of money that would follow each child
to whichever school he or she attends. Children whom it costs more to teach
(because they're poor, disabled, English learners or low-achieving) would be
assigned additional money - 5% to 20% above the base amount for students from
poverty backgrounds in the examples provided by the mayor.
The mayor's goal - to make
school funding more equitable inside the city limits - is laudable. But FSF may
not redistribute the right amounts of money to the right places and could
embroil the system in unnecessary wrangling about percentages and phase-ins.
The fact is, some of our
schools start out needing much more money than others because of years of
underfunding, misplaced priorities and neglect; while leveling the playing
field sounds good in theory, in practice it ignores that reality. So instead of
introducing an abstract system for redistributing funds, the chancellor should
take an immediate inventory of where those real needs are - and then go about
fixing them, urgently.
For example, the Court of
Appeals in the Campaign for Fiscal Equity school finance litigation was
appalled to learn that although all high school students must pass a Regents
exam in laboratory science to get a diploma, 31 high schools in the city lacked
functioning science labs. Similarly, hundreds of middle schools in high-needs
areas have no certified math, science or bilingual teachers. We need a blunt
assessment of such needs and crash program to fix injustices like those.
Even from a long-range
perspective, over-reliance on FSF is flawed. In other cities where an FSF
approach has been tried, the determination of the weightings - the exact price
tags to be assigned to different types of students - has been mired in
politics, and the amounts allocated to students with special needs have been
minimized and distorted.
Although the expert cost
analyses undertaken in the CFE case indicated that the extra weighting needed
for impoverished students must be in the range of 50% to 100%, FSF systems
typically provide much lower amounts. Cincinnati has implemented a system that
provides just 5% extra for students from poor backgrounds, and 29% extra for
the gifted and talented students.
Finally, FSF dodges the
biggest funding problem currently facing our public schools - the lack of
adequate funding overall.
Parents in schools that
would see a loss of funding under the mayor's proposed scheme are already
expressing alarm. Robbing Peter to pay Paul could seriously divide the public
education community at a time when all supporters of our schools should be
united in pressing the governor and the Legislature to provide an adequate
amount of funding, well above the minimum $2 billion constitutional floor the
court established.
The mayor and the
chancellor should be applauded for their desire to help the city's neediest
students, but the best way to do that is simply to identify their needs and
meet them. The system they have proposed is just playing with abstract - and
inadequate - numbers.
Rebell is executive
director of The Campaign for Educational Equity at Teachers College, Columbia
University. He was the co-counsel for the Campaign for Fiscal Equity in its
lawsuit against New York State.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ideas_opinions/story/491702p-414198c.html
Published Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007