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Kathy
Kitchen, Editor

For many years school construction was the responsibility
of local school boards and governing bodies and was financed
primarily with local debt. Due to the growing demand for new
schools and renovations to existing facilities, the issue
has been placed in the national political spotlight. Many
state governments as well as the federal government have taken
some action to assist local school boards with the increased
demand for school construction.
What has moved the issue to the forefront? Several factors
seem to be contributing to this focus:
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The economy has strengthened considerably over the last
ten to fifteen years. School boards are able to go to
the public and ask for money for school construction and
renovation. Over the last several years, districts that
had never been able to pass a bond referendum are now
succeeding and those that often barely passed have received
overwhelming pass rates.
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Public education in general has moved into the political
arena. With much attention being placed on education reform,
primarily in the standards movement, school administrators
are able to use that publicity to gain support from the
public for much needed construction.
-
Growing enrollment has continued to place emphasis on
the need for new construction. Only now are school divisions
able to build classrooms that have been needed for a decade
at the elementary level. At the same time those pupils
are moving through to the middle and high school level,
creating a shortage of classrooms at the secondary level.
The need for temporary or mobile classrooms has continued
to rise throughout Virginia and the nation.
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The age of school facilities has continued to increase.
With more than half of Virginias schools being more
than 25 years old, the need to replace or renovate outdated
facilities continues to place pressure on local boards.
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Finally, debate continues as to whether the condition
of the school building has an impact on student achievement.
Several studies have been conducted (and will be discussed
later in this paper) that correlate building condition
with student achievement. As pressure mounts on schools
to receive accreditation based upon student achievement,
this area of concern will continue to be examined.
Local school divisions are not able to keep expenditure
data that relates to specific standards. Therefore, the
method used to “cost” the Standards of Quality has been of
issue since the Constitution was ratified in 1971. Governor
Holton appointed the Task Force on Financing the SOQ to
study the issue and make recommendations. The task force
presented two reports, the first in December of 1972 and the
second in July of 1973.
The methodologies recommended in the task force reports
differed in their approaches. The first task force
determined the number of instructional personnel required to
meet standards by type of position. Average salaries were
then used to determine the cost of the personnel component,
with statewide expenditures for other services averaged.
The second task force recommended the instructional
component be calculated by using a predetermined
instructional personnel ratio (suggesting that a ratio
ranging from 48 to 52 personnel per 1,000 students in
membership would be adequate). The concept of calculating
positions according to specific standards was not included
in the report.
As a result of these reports, in 1974 the Commonwealth made
several significant changes to educational funding:
- The Standards of Quality were adopted, setting forth the
instructional personnel and support services required by
each local school division
- The minimum reasonable cost per pupil of funding these
requirements was established
- The one-cent state sales and
use tax distributed to localities based on school-age
population was subtracted from the calculated cost
- The State committed to paying approximately 50% of the
SOQ costs on a statewide basis, with the localities funding
the remaining 50%
- The composite index of local ability-to-pay was created
to determine the actual apportionment of costs between the
state and the individual localities
The methodology recommended by the second task force remained
in effect until the 1986-88 biennium when recommendations made
by JLARC in Funding the Standards of Quality Part 1: Assessing
SOQ Costs were implemented.
Two events led the General Assembly to direct JLARC to conduct
an in-depth analysis of the funding methods used to support K-12
education. First, local school and government officials
continued to express concerns that the Commonwealth was not
“fully funding its share of the SOQ.” Second, JLARC had
completed an analysis of all state mandates and concluded that
education funding was not consistent with state requirements.
The General Assembly asked that JLARC first look at the methods
used to calculate the SOQ costs and then analyze the methods
used to distribute state funding to the localities. These
studies were published as Senate Document No. 20 in 1986
(Funding the Standards of Quality Part 1: Assessing SOQ Costs)
and as Senate Document No. 25 in 1988 (Funding the Standards of
Quality Part 2: SOQ Costs and Distribution).
Funding the Standards of Quality Part 1: Assessing SOQ Costs
The first report recommended changes to the methodology in both
instructional and support costs.
Instructional Positions
The Standards of Quality set forth minimum staffing levels for
instructional personnel. Rather than calculate a statewide
number of positions per 1,000 students in membership, JLARC
applied the various requirements at the school level.
- Tested the validity of traditional Appropriation Act
standard
- Identified all references to staffing requirements or
pupil/teacher ratios in codified SOQ and the Standards of
Accreditation
- Applied these standards against enrollment at each grade
level in each school
- Accumulated number of instructional personnel by school
division actually required to meet the SOQ
- Established traditional Appropriation Act standard as
floor or minimal level of staffing funded
- Instructional staffing levels funded by state ranged
from 59.5 per 1000 students to 100.0 per 1000 students, with
a statewide average of 62.9
Support Costs
As opposed to the number and type of personnel required,
quantifiable standards are not available for instructional
salaries and other support costs (administration,
transportation, health, operations and maintenance). To
accurately determine the cost of “doing business,” these costs
must be identified.
> Two options for recognizing
operating cost
• Recognize whatever school divisions spend
• Recognize “reasonable” cost
> Governance and control of
schools dictated to JLARC to use “reasonable”
What is “Reasonable” Cost?
Department of Education had previously used the statewide
average to determine the cost
• A few large school divisions determined the funding
level for the rest of the school divisions
• Average cost exceeded the actual cost in most school
divisions
JLARC said “reasonable” cost should be what most school
divisions spend and therefore settled on “prevailing” cost
What is “Prevailing” Cost?
- Counts the cost experience of every school division but
is not overly influenced by the highest or lowest cost
- Weighted average cost where weights are determined not
by size but by proximity to the middle cost in the
distribution
- Affords the greatest weight to costs clustered around
the middle cost
- Most school divisions’ actual costs are either a little
less or a little more than the prevailing cost
- Prevailing cost is less than the statewide average but
higher than the median
- The prevailing calculation was used on all costs not
quantified by the SOQ
• Salaries (7 distributions)
• Support costs (50 distributions)
Funding the Standards of Quality Part 2: SOQ Costs and
Distribution
The second JLARC report dealt with the question of how SOQ funds
should be distributed. Despite perceptions to the contrary, the
key decisions about the distribution of SOQ funds did not come
from JLARC but from policy decisions made by the Governor and
the General Assembly.
Six basic questions determine state funding of the SOQ:
1. How should total SOQ costs be shared between the state and
localities?
2. The cost of which programs should be shared between the state
and the localities based on ability-to-pay (i.e. equalized)?
3. How should ability-to-pay be measured?
4. How should sales tax revenue be distributed?
5. What level of local effort should be required?
6. How much should be appropriated as state aid?
How should costs be shared?
Prior to the JLARC study, the state had paid on average 50% of
the basic operating costs and 100% of recognized fringe benefit
costs. To reduce disparity, it was determined that the state
should increase its share of the operating costs to 55%. A
decision was also made to reduce the state share of recognized
fringe benefit costs to 55%. These changes increased the overall
cost to localities.
The cost of which programs should be shared based on
ability-to-pay (i.e. equalized)?
Prior to the study, only Basic School Aid and Gifted funding
were equalized. A decision was made to equalize all program
funds that related to the Standards of Quality.
- Basic Aid
- Remedial Education
- Gifted and Talented
- Pupil Transportation
- Vocational Education
- Fringe Benefits
- Special Education
How should ability-to-pay be measured?
- JLARC study presented several measures of ability-to-pay
that were technically sound
1. Composite Index: Measures local wealth through property
values, adjusted gross income, and sales tax collections;
doesn’t really measure local ability to generate revenue;
50/40/10 weights are artificial; is well-known and
understood
2. Revenue Capacity Index: Measures the revenue a locality
would generate if it levied average tax rates for each tax;
is linked to local ability to raise revenue, but is
technically complex
3. Equalized Effort Index: Ensures that each locality would
have to tap its overall tax base equally in order to meet
SOQ costs; produced tax equity in one action, but was a
radical change
- Both the revenue capacity and equalized effort index
were technically superior to the composite index in
measuring ability-to-pay
- Decision was made to retain composite index because of
its level of acceptance and general accuracy
How should sales tax revenue be distributed?
- Use of school-age population to distribute the 1 cent
state sales and use tax was a compromise carried forward
from the early 1970’s
- JLARC study produced several alternatives for
distribution other than this measure
• Average daily membership
• Population
• Several combinations of school-age population and ADM
- Decision was made to retain school-age population
because it was generally accepted
What level of local effort should be required?
- Until the JLARC study, required local effort meant
matching basic aid and gifted funding only
- To fully fund the calculated cost of the SOQ, a local
share for all SOQ programs needed to be appropriated
- During the 1988 session, required local effort was
changed to require a local match for all equalized accounts:
- Basic Aid
- Pupil Transportation
- Gifted and Talented
- Remedial Education
- Vocational Education
- Fringe Benefits
- Special Education
- For most localities this did not require any more local
funding than already being appropriated; some localities
were affected, however
How much should be appropriated as state aid?
- Totally the decision as to how much to appropriate for
public schools is left to the General Assembly
- The General Assembly has fully funded the requirement
according to the JLARC methodology since its inception
- Additional state funding has been provided for other
programs not included in the methodology
After the completion of these two studies, Virginia’s SOQ
funding system was challenged in court. In 1994, the Virginia
Supreme Court upheld the system when it was challenged on
education disparity grounds.
Review of Elementary and Secondary School Funding
Concerns remained, however, about either the adequacy of the
standards themselves or the costs that are determined to meet
the standards. The 2000 session of the General Assembly asked
JLARC to conduct a study on the adequacy of funding of the SOQ.
Specifically, the language amendment was as follows:
“The Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission shall
study the funding of the Standards of Quality (SOQ) and
prevailing school division practices for elementary and
secondary education in the Commonwealth. The study shall
include, but not be limited to, a review of (i) current
statutory and budget provisions governing the calculation of SOQ
costs and funding; (ii) the practices of local school divisions
that exceed the Standards of Quality and that are not currently
funded by the Standards of Quality, including the costs for
technology; (iii) potential enhancements to the methodology for
calculating the costs of the Standards of Quality, and potential
methods for calculating the costs of other prevailing school
division practices; (iv) the extent to which school division
practices which exceed the Standards of Quality are associated
with local ability-to-pay; (v) the Department of Education’s
processes and procedures for calculating and distributing state
funds based on the current funding methodology; and (vi) the
extent to which the state distribution of funding for elementary
and secondary education, through the Standards of Quality or
other means, is based on local ability-to-pay. The Commission
shall submit an interim report to the 2001 Session of the
General Assembly and a final report by June 1, 2001.”
Governor Gilmore vetoed this language amendment. The Joint
Legislative Audit and Review Commission, however, placed a study
of funding for elementary and secondary education on its agenda.
Based on concerns expressed by legislators during the 2000
General Assembly session, broad issue questions for the review
were identified. Regional input sessions provided JLARC staff
with information about the expenditure areas of greatest concern
at the local level. Seven issue questions were developed to
generally guide the review:
- Is the State currently implementing the SOQ cost
methodology and are the State and all localities fully
funding their shares of SOQ costs?
- Are there improvements or enhancements to the SOQ
methodology that appear appropriate?
- Are there “funding gaps” for State-mandated or sponsored
programs, where the State does not fund, or does not
adequately fund, a share of the costs?
- To what extent is funding distributed based on local
ability-to-pay?
- For what specific practices do localities make
expenditures that exceed recognized SOQ costs, and how
widespread are these practices? Is the extent to which the
practices are used related to local ability-to-pay? How much
is spent for these practices? (The proposed issue would
include capital outlay and debt service costs.)
- What factors should be considered in determining the
degree of State support that may be appropriate for local
practices that exceed the SOQ?
- If the General Assembly wishes to enhance the level of
State support for elementary and secondary education, what
options are available and what are the associated costs?
JLARC’s report, issued in February 2002 contained seven
primary findings:
- Localities that support educational programs going
beyond the SOQ have some valid reasons to be concerned about
the level of responsibility that they bear for education
costs.
- As it has recently indicated it will do, the Board of
Education needs to re-examine the SOQ, particularly for
instructional staffing positions, to ensure that the
standards are realistic in relation to the Commonwealth’s
current educational needs and practices.
- Some of the changes made to the JLARC staff methodology
during the 1990s raise questions as to whether the State’s
foundation cost estimates have become less current and less
realistic in relation to educational practice.
- Adjustments should be considered to make the State’s
foundation cost estimates more accurate and current for the
years in which the funds are provided.
- DOE needs to ensure that all localities are providing
sufficient local resources to meet SOQ requirements.
- There are a wide variety of actions the State could
pursue to enhance its support of elementary and secondary
education beyond the full costs of the SOQ.
- The current framework that is utilized for making the
determination of State and local share responsibilities for
education appears to compatible with constitutional
provisions (referring to the Composite Index of Local
Ability-to-Pay).
The funding items set forth in the report were divided into
three distinct tiers. Tier One dealt with the current
methodology and meeting SOQ costs. Tier Two included enhancing
the Recognition of Instructional Personnel and At-Risk
Pre-School Funding. Tier Three included debt service to
supplement current state funds for capital purposes and teacher
salary costs. For the 2002-2004 biennium, the total estimated
costs of all three tiers ranged from nearly two billion to
nearly three billion dollars over the two-year period. (The full
JLARC report can be found on the JLARC website at
http://jlarc.state.va.us).
The 2002 Session of the General Assembly addressed some of the
Tier One recommendations. A total of $24.9 million in FY2003 and
$50 million in FY2004 was provided to phase out the practice of
deducting prevailing locally generated revenues from the Basic
Aid cost calculation. In addition, $4.1 million in FY2003 and
$54.2 million in FY2004 was provided to restore 72% by FY2004 of
the prevailing cost of certain administrative support positions
that had been dropped from the SOQ cost calculation.
In June of 2003, the State Board of Education approved changes
to the Standards of Quality addressing some of the Tier Two
recommendations contained in the JLARC report. These changes
included (1) requiring one full-time principal at each
elementary school; (2) requiring one full-time assistant
principal for each 400 students in each school; (3) funding
elementary resource teachers in art, music, and physical
education; (4) reducing the secondary school pupil to teacher
funding ratio from 25:1 to 21:1 to support scheduled planning
time for secondary teachers; (5) reducing the state required
speech language pathologist caseload from 68 to 60 students; (6)
funding two technology specialist positions per 1,000 students
in grades K-12 division wide, one to provide technical support
and one to serve as a resource teacher for instructional
technology; (7) revising the formula for the calculation of
funding support for SOQ prevention, intervention, and
remediation; and (8) requiring one full-time position per 1,000
students to serve as a reading specialist. These changes were
subject to funding by the Governor and General Assembly during
the 2004 Session.
The 2004-2006 budget introduced by the Governor to the 2004
Session of the General Assembly contained more than $1 billion
for the re-benchmarking of the Standards of Quality and did
address some of the Tier One recommendations made by JLARC.
These included updating inflation factors, updating health care
premium costs, and funding the prevailing cost of administrative
positions. The budget included funding for only one of the State
Board of Education’s proposed SOQ changes – a revised formula
for the SOQ prevention, intervention, and remediation. In
addition, contingent upon passage of recommended tax changes,
the budget included increased funding for at-risk 4-year old
programs, fully funding the cost of competing for support
positions, and increased ESL staffing. To accomplish these
goals, the Governor’s budget reinstated the deduction of certain
local revenues and for the first time proposed deducting certain
federal revenues from the SOQ calculation.
After a lengthy and sometimes contentious session, the 2006-2008
biennium budget was adopted by the General Assembly and signed
by the Governor. The Public Education Standards of Quality/Local
Real Estate Property Relief Fund authorized in HB5018 provides
one-quarter cent of sales tax revenue for public education,
estimated at $167.0 million in FY2005 and $210.7 million in
FY2006. Half of this amount (1/8 of a cent) each year is
distributed based on the most recent triennial census of
school-aged population, consistent with the distribution of the
one-cent sales tax dedicated to public education. The remaining
half (1/8 of a cent) each year is appropriated to Basic Aid to
support the three new SOQ standards recommended by the Board of
Education and approved by the General Assembly. These are:
Five elementary resource teacher positions per 1,000 students
in grades K-5 (based on all membership) in order to provide
three periods of instruction per week in the areas of art,
music, and physical education;
One-quarter of the funding for the required planning period
for middle and high school teachers in FY2005 (resulting in a
24:1 school-level pupil-teacher ratio) and the full amount of
funding in FY2006 (resulting in a 21:1 school-level
pupil-teacher ratio); and,
One support technology position per 1,000 students in FY2005
and one support technology and one instructional technology
position per 1,000 students in FY2006.
In addition, the budget contained funding to reverse 100% of the
deduction from Basic Aid from locally generated revenues and to
reverse 70.78% of the deduction from federal revenues. This
action leaves 29.22% of these revenues deducted from Basic Aid.
According to language contained in the reports of the General
Assembly, this is the estimated portion that is used by school
divisions for support costs.
For many years, the General Assembly and state officials have
often been concerned when additional state funds provided for
education have been used to supplant local funds. Many have
cited circumstances where additional state funds for education
have been “used” to support other local government services –
i.e. “buying a fire truck.” In an unprecedented move, language
was included in the 2004-2006 Appropriation Act (2004 Virginia
Acts of Assembly Special Session I) relating to the Public
Education Standards of Quality/Local Real Estate Property Tax
Relief fund stating, “These additional funds are provided to
local school divisions and local governments in order to relieve
the financial pressure education programs place on local real
estate taxes.” In a more direct manner, work papers of the
Assembly stated that these funds could be used to lower the real
estate tax rate of local governments. While this writer has no
official data on the impact this language has had on local
government funding in support of education, the media reported
in the spring of 2004 that some local governments lowered local
support in an amount equal to the additional state funds (the
school division received no additional funding) while others
“shared” the resources with the school system. To the extent
that local governments have been spending significant resources
above that required by the Standards of Quality for many years,
this would seem appropriate. School advocates on the other hand,
cite the new and difficult challenges school divisions are
facing each year due to the Standards of Learning, No Child Left
Behind, and demographic and socio-economic changes in student
populations that require increasing financial support.
A survey conducted by the Virginia Municipal League and Virginia
Association of Counties in the Summer, 2004, asked localities
how additional state revenue for education generated by the
legislature’s action affected their FY05 budgets. The responses
indicated that localities took various actions, including that
the new money did not affect the local transfer to education,
that it allowed the locality to reduce the local transfer to
education, that it enabled funding of additional school or local
priorities, or that it enabled lowering the local real estate
tax or prevented an increase in tax.

Over the last decade, thousands of studies, articles, and
academic papers have been written relating to the condition
of Americaís school facilities. The United States General
Accounting Office alone has released five reports since 1995
dealing with this issue. In addition, the U. S. Department
of Education has issued several reports as well. While some
chronicle simply the condition of the buildings and the cost
to bring those facilities to an acceptable level, others paint
horror stories of students being subjected to hazardous conditions
on a daily basis. This phenomena is not new, however, as Kozol
wrote about these conditions as early as 1991 in his book,
Savage inequalities: Children in Americaís schools(New
York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers). A detailed bibliography
of this important issue can be found following the NCES report
referenced above.
Over the past decade, a number of lawsuits have been filed
challenging the funding that is provided for school construction
and renovation. While these challenges may cite differing
conditions, the primary issue has been equal access to school
facilities. The Arizona Supreme Court cited the following
in Roosevelt Elementary School No. 66 v. Bishop in 1994:
Some districts have schoolhouses that are unsafe,
unhealthy, and in violation of building, fire, and safety
codes. Some districts use dirt lots for playgrounds. There
are schools without libraries, science laboratories, computer
rooms, art programs, gymnasiums, and auditoriums. But in other
districts, there are schools with indoor swimming pools, a
domed stadium, science laboratories, television studios, well
stock libraries, satellite dishes, and extensive computer
systems.
In the case cited above in Arizona and in Ohio as well, courts
ruled that widely disparate funding system, particularly funding
for facilities, prevented students from attaining equal opportunities,
achievement, and job opportunities. In Ohio, public school
facilities were cited as key evidence of the violation of
the uniform education articles guaranteed in the stateís Constitution
(The State of Ohio v. DeRolph, 677 N.E. 2d 733 [Ohio 1997]).

During the 1998-2000 biennium budget, the General Assembly
provided the first state funds dedicated to financing school
construction, renovation, and debt service. A total of $55
million in each year of the biennium was provided for this
purpose. This level of funding is continued in the 2000-2002
biennium. These funds must be used for nonrecurring expenditures
by the relevant school division. Nonrecurring costs, as defined
by the Appropriation Act, include school construction, additions,
infrastructure, site acquisition, renovations, technology,
and other expenditures related to modernizing classroom equipment,
school safety equipment or school safety renovations, and
debt service payments on school projects completed during
the last ten years. Allocated on a per student basis, and
subject to a local match, these funds represent an acknowledgement
by the General Assembly that localities need assistance with
this major financial issue.
In addition, during 1998-2000 the proceeds from the lottery
were specifically identified in the Appropriation Act for
public education. More than half of the funds was used as
a source to fund the states share of the Basic Aid Payments. The
remaining funds were included to be distributed on a per student
basis. Local governments were required to match these funds
based on the local ability-to-pay index and certify that the
funds would not be used to reduce local effort. A further
restriction was that no more than 50% of the funding would
be used for recurring costs and that at least 50% would be
spent on non-recurring expenses, such as school construction,
additions, infrastructure, site acquisition, renovations,
technology, and other expenditures related to modernizing
classroom equipment, and debt service payments on school projects
completed during the last 10 years.
The National Governorís Association has moved this issue
to the forefront as well. The NGA Center for Best Practices
has researched current state activities support school construction.
The Center discovered that Governors are focusing more attention
on school construction and renovation than ever before. Some
of the highlights of the paper include:
- Six states have established a new agency to oversee school
construction within the state.
- Ten states have established formula for determining the
amount of state funding each school district receives.
- Four states require the Governor and the state legislature
to approve all school construction projects prior to state
funding being made available.
- Eleven states subsidize, reimburse, or match local funding
for construction projects.
Information about 43 states and the Virgin Islands are provided
in the issue brief. The summary may be found at: www.nga.org/center/divisions/1,1188,C_ISSUE_BRIEF^_384,00.html.

The condition of schools in the Commonwealth and in the country
cannot be discussed without the subject of technology rising
to the surface. Much attention has been paid to the need for
states, localities, and schools to have a technology plan
that will enable students to receive the instruction necessary
to enter the workforce in the 21st century. Purchasing the
necessary technology is only part of the overall challenge.
Many buildings in the Commonwealth were not five years ago,
and still are not today able to accept the newer technologies
requested and required by instructional staff. Wide area
networks, as well as local area networks, are needed to properly
use technology on a building-wide and division-wide basis.
These networks require substantial investment in infrastructure
in our school buildings. Miles of copper and fiber are needed
in buildings to provide the networking services required.
At the same time, many schools do not have the needed electrical
service to accept the new technologies.
The Commonwealth and its localities have been actively engaged
in addressing this issue for many years. Information on the
funding provided in this critical area, as well as other data,
may be found on this web site under the technology ìdigital
divideî issue brief.

The condition of school buildings in the Commonwealth and
the nation will continue to be a major funding issue. With
public education now high on all political agenda, the spotlight
will continue to keep public attention on the needs for building
improvements. School construction is a big and growing business.
In the 2000 School Planning and Management Construction Report,
Paul Abramson reports that almost $18 billion worth of school
construction was completed in 1999 and in the year 2000, school
districts are planning to start almost $23 billion of work.

Click here for summary of recent Virginia Legislative history
of Capital
Funding: Facilities and Technology.
2000 Construction Report, Paul Abramson, School
Planning and Management, February 2000.
Impact
of Inadequate School Facilities on Student Learning,
U. S. Department of Education.
Urgent
Need for School Construction and Modernization,
U. S. Department of Education.
Condition
of Americas Public School Facilities: 1999,
National Center for Education Statistics, Statistical Analysis
Report, June 2000.
Building
Americas Schools: State Efforts to Address School Facility
Needs, NGA Center for Best Practices, June 20, 2000.

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