1 / 20

The State Budget & Adult Education

The State Budget & Adult Education. Legislative Analyst’s Office January 2010. www.lao.ca.gov. LAO Presentation Overview. Provide a general budget update. Discuss categorical flexibility generally. Discuss impact of budget and flexibility on adult education.

Download Presentation

The State Budget & Adult Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The State Budget & Adult Education Legislative Analyst’s Office January 2010 www.lao.ca.gov

  2. LAO Presentation Overview • Provide a general budget update. • Discuss categorical flexibility generally. • Discuss impact of budget and flexibility on adult education. • Consider related policy questions.

  3. Overview of State Budget and Governor’s Solutions • Governor identifies $18.9b problem. • $6.6b at year-end in 2009-10. • $12.3b in 2010-11. • Governor’s plan contains $1b reserve. • Plan also contains $19.9b in solutions. • 40 percent in flexibility from federal government. • 40 percent reductions to state spending. • 20 percent in fund shifts and ballot measures. • Plan triggers additional cuts if federal funds don’t materialize.

  4. Proposition 98 Funding Stays Virtually Flat Under Governor’s Proposal Overview of Proposition 98 Funding (In Millions) • Departs from July budget agreement on Maintenance Factor. • Seeks waiver of federal minimum spending requirement.

  5. School Districts Face Funding “Cliff” in 2010-11 • Drop in 2010-11 from one-time solutions: • Federal stimulus money. • Deferrals. • Less in restricted reserves.

  6. Governor’s Major Budget Proposals • Major midyear proposals: • Capture $340m in unspent Class Size Reduction Funds. • Recognize $228m in revenue limit savings. • Major budget-year proposals: • Includes $1.9b to restore one-time solutions. • Reduces revenue limits by $1.2b for reduced administration costs. • $300m linked to district flexibility to contract out.

  7. State Tried to Help Manage Cuts By Increasing Flexibility • State tried to help LEAs manage cuts by providing flexibility related to: • Categorical funding. • Reserves. • Length of school year. • Governor’s budget includes additional flexibility. • Questions remain for Legislature: • What has the impact been? • Should it continue beyond current sunset?

  8. Early Reactions to Flexibility Suggest Some Benefits • To what extent did flexibility affect your ability to develop and balance a budget?

  9. Early Reactions to Flexibility Suggest Some Benefits • To what extent did flexibility affect your ability to develop a strategic plan?

  10. Early Reactions to Flexibility Suggest Some Benefits • To what extent did flexibility affect your ability to fund programs for struggling/at-risk students?

  11. …But Need to Weigh These Perceptions Against Programmatic Impact… • Results suggest at least some funds being shifted away from: • Arts and music. • Alternative education. • CAHSEE remediation. • Career technical education. • And, last but not least…

  12. Early Results on Adult Education Suggest Funds Being Shifted Away • Our district is changing funding for adult education:

  13. Early Results on Adult Ed Suggest Some Program Changes • Our district is changing its adult education program:

  14. Adult Education Funding System Before Categorical Flexibility • Funding mechanism had several disadvantages: • Growth mechanism on autopilot. • Allocation method arcane. • No clear sense funds targeted areas with greatest need. • No clear sense of how fees contribute to local budgets. • General agreement the state could improve upon model. • Leaves state to answer several major policy questions.

  15. What Is Adult Education’s Core Mission? • Data suggest California funds broader adult education priorities than other states. • Roughly one quarter of adult education students not enrolled in WIA courses.

  16. What Is Community College’s Role in ABE, ASE, ESL? • Advantages and disadvantages to delivering these courses through either system. • Adult education system: • Courses cover K-12 content. • Coordination with CAHSEE and diploma requirements. • Geographically more diverse. • Community college system. • Could put students on a degree track. • More targeted focus on adults. • More opportunities for applied learning.

  17. How Should CA Provide Career-Technical Education (CTE)? • What is effective CTE for adults? • Difference between technical training and basic employment skills. • Of K-12/CCC articulation agreements under Gov’s CTE initiative, almost 30 percent were for word processing. • Big difference in terms of funding requirements. • Who should deliver CTE for adults? • Again, CCC/adult ed systems need to be coordinated. • ROCPs in flexibility – no longer subject to limitations on adults served.

  18. How Do We Provide Funding? • Once basic programmatic questions are answered, how do we fund programs? • Federal questions remain: • How can we best leverage federal funding? • What will happen with WIA reauthorization?

  19. How Do We Determine Efficacy? • Data coordination insufficient. • As a result, data limited on: • Employment after completing adult education. • Postsecondary outcomes after adult education. • Accountability insufficient: • Who should be responsible if a student begins postsecondary education underprepared? • How do we tell if our adult ed system is helping to solve our demographic and economic challenges?

  20. Contact Information • Jim Soland, Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO): • jim.soland@lao.ca.gov • (916) 319-8327 • www.lao.ca.gov

More Related