Schools Left Hanging as States Dither on Budget Cuts (2024)

School district administrators this month have been placed in a torturous holding pattern.

There’s no question that state sales and income tax revenue have plummeted because of the coronavirus pandemic and that most districts will have to swallow sizeable budget cuts in the coming months if Congress doesn’t come up with another relief package. But in most states, legislatures haven’t given a clue as to how much public schools will be expected to cut.

Not knowing how much money they’ll have to work with this fall makes it all the more difficult for school officials to decide which contracts to renew, how many teachers to hire this fall, and when to open school back up.

“It’s chaos, and it’s been challenging to deal with all the political uncertainty on top of the other chaos that districts are dealing with at the moment,” said Heather DuBois Bourenane, the director of the Wisconsin Public Education Network, a school funding advocacy organization. “We’re hearing, ‘Get ready to tighten your belt.’ Well, the belts were already tightend before this happened. It’s stressful for our districts to try to adjust to students’ growing needs with even more insufficient funds.”

According to Edunomics, a school policy think tank based at Georgetown University, 27 states still have not revised their fiscal projections of how much revenue districts could lose this year and next since the pandemic has hit. Thirteen states have given school districts a general warning that they will likely soon have to make budget cuts, and only 11 states have given detailed warnings about how much revenue they can expect to lose this year.

More and more district administrators have indicated to Education Week’s research center that they expect to make steep budget cuts this year. In March, when the pandemic first hit, only 42 percent of surveyed administrators said they expect budget cuts, but when that same question was posed last month, more than 52 percent said they expect budget cuts. More than a quarter of respondents said last month that they think their district will get more money next year.

When budget cuts are passed by states’ legislatures later this summer, districts, with just a few weeks before school starts, will have to scramble to rewrite their budget, cut programs and lay off staff. This sort of budget-cutting can be emotionally fraught, politically contentious and, in the long run, academically destructive.

But K-12 finance experts say district administrators shouldn’t wait. They suggest administrators act now to avoid haphazardly making classroom cuts this year.

“If states wait longer to revise their budget projections...that will send districts further into the future before making any spending changes which could require deeper cuts,” Marguerite Roza, a Georgetown University school finance professor, during a recent webinar. “If you can’t save money now, you’ll have to save more and save more suddenly at the end of the summer and possibly after the school year starts. That’s why those of us who look at the fiscal impact are very anxious about timing and when districts are notified. We’re in chapter two of an eight chapter story. This thing is not done yet. So stay tuned.”

Below are four tips from finance experts on how to mitigate budget cuts this summer.

Overcommunicate. Administrators should be explicit with school board members, parents, and teachers about the looming budget deficit, said Jonathan Travers, a partner with a partner with Education Resource Strategies, which consults with urban districts on ways to make money have more impact in the classroom. Even though administrators may not know exactly how much they will have to cut out of their budget this year, administrators should convene working groups to talk openly about what the district currently spends their money on and collect ideas on how to make budget cuts.

In Education Week’s survey, 40 percent of principals said they knew “a lot” about how the coronavirus would impact their district’s budget, while another 41 percent said they knew “some.” The rest of the respondents said they knew little or none at all.

“A CFO’s chief responsibility is to explain, not defend,” said Travers said. “I think the most strategic CFOs are going to help districts understand why school spending numbers are what they are.”

Assess now your students’ needs and figure out what programs are working and not working. Travers has also encouraged district CFOs to work more collaboratively with academic teams to have a good understanding of where students’ greatest needs are. He encourages administrators to use the time before legislative sessions to pore through test scores and talk with principals to gather anecdotal information about programs that are academically essential for struggling students. This information will come in handy when it comes time to cut, he said.

Trim costs now. Administrators of Portland, Ore., knew budget cuts were on their way so the district this spring took cost-cutting measures in preparation for a brutal budget year. It’s a model administrators have encouraged other districts to replicate.

The district’s school board cut one day out of the school week, closed the administrative buildings on Fridays, froze hiring, cut back on purchasing and, instituted for its entire teaching force a 20 percent pay cut. The district encouraged teachers to apply for partial unemployment through the CARES Act this year to make up for the cut in their paychecks. In total, the district made more than $10 million in cuts, which administrators predict will save more than 66 jobs next year when they expect the state to cut more than $60 million from its budget when they reconvene.

Come up with budget-cutting scenarios now. When Nolberto Delgadillo, the CFO of Tulsa’s schools in Oklahoma, had just finished making drastic cuts out of his district’s budget this year, an arduous, months-long process, the COVID-19 pandemic hit and oil prices tanked. It was a clear sign that he needed to quickly reconvene board members, parents, and community members to figure out what more budget-cutting will look like. Last month, he and his board came up with several scenarios in case that the state’s legislature this summer cuts 2 or 5 percent out of the district’s budget.

“Be as clear as possible with district leadership/key stakeholders around what is being prioritized. That is if we need to make ‘X dollars worth of reductions,’ we’ve already done the pre-work and have a general understanding of what the revised investment plan may look like.”

Schools Left Hanging as States Dither on Budget Cuts (1)
Daarel Burnette II

Assistant Managing Editor, Education Week

Daarel Burnette II was an assistant managing editor for Education Week.

A version of this article appeared in the June 17, 2020 edition of Education Week as Schools Left Hanging as States Dither on Budget Cuts

Schools Left Hanging as States Dither on Budget Cuts (2024)

FAQs

What are the effects of budget cuts on education? ›

First, the spending declines that followed the Great Recession halted a five-decade-long increase in student test scores in reading and math. Second, those cuts also were associated with slower rates of college-going among students on track to become first-time college freshmen.

When school districts are funded by local taxes, only the likelihood of disparities in funding goes up.? ›

When school districts are funded by local taxes only, the likelihood of disparities in funding goes up. True; Poorer areas generate less tax revenue for schools, while wealthier areas generate more, making the level of school funding much lower in poorer areas.

How state budgets are breaking US schools? ›

America's school systems are funded by the 50 states. In this fiery talk, Bill Gates says that state budgets are riddled with accounting tricks that disguise the true cost of health care and pensions and are weighted with worsening deficits -- with the financing of education at the losing end.

Why is education underfunded in the United States? ›

White and middle-class families leaving urban cores in previous decades devastated local tax bases, leaving many schools chronically underfunded. Because American schools have traditionally been funded largely through local property taxes, high-poverty districts often received paltry resources.

Is the US school system underfunded? ›

According to The Century Foundation, we are underfunding our, “K-12 public schools by nearly $150 billion annually, robbing more than 30 million school children of the resources they need to succeed in the classroom.” The schools that are being robbed of much needed funding are most often those where Black and Latinx ...

Are public schools underfunded in the US? ›

Education funding generally is inadequate and inequitable; It relies too heavily on state and local resources (particularly property tax revenues); the federal government plays a small and an insufficient role; funding levels vary widely across states; and high-poverty districts get less funding per student than low- ...

Are all US schools funded by property taxes? ›

Local funding for schools

Local school revenue comes from cities, counties, or the school districts themselves. About 81% of local funding for schools comes from property taxes. Other revenue comes from parents via parent-teacher associations and other groups.

What are the effects of budget cuts? ›

Budget cuts have impacts – immediately as a decrease in discretionary spending, but also long term as the programs have to adjust to restricted budgets and minimize the scope of their projects. When it comes cutting research and development (R&D) programs, the impacts can last for years.

What are the effects of budget deficit? ›

All deficits tend to reduce the potential capital stock in the economy. The sale of government securities has a direct impact on interest rates. The interest rate paid on loans to the government represents nearly risk-free investments against which all other financial instruments must compete.

Do school spending cuts matter? ›

Cohorts exposed to these spending cuts had lower test scores and lower college-going rates. The test score impacts were larger for children in poor neighborhoods. Evidence suggests that both test scores and college-going were more adversely affected for Black and White students than Latinx students.

What are the effects of cutting government spending? ›

Spending reductions by governments during recessions also worsen economic conditions. In addition to reducing demand for private-sector goods and services, cutting the public-sector workforce causes public-sector revenues to decline.

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