By Carlos Guerra, San Antonio Express-News
Yet again, the current crop of Austin big shots is saying they will make major improvements to the school funding system.
But will they really?
Or will it be another smoke-and-mirrors scam in which meaningless new standards are set but no new money is provided for schools to meet them, while money once taken through one tax is replaced with an equal sum taken with another tax but divided up in a new, more inequitable manner?
This is really about GOP leaders who won on promises of eliminating the recapture provision in the school funding system that takes tax revenue from Texas' 137 richest districts and redistributes it among the other 897 districts.
Now that it's put-up-or-shut-up time, they know that letting those 137 districts keep all their money just for their kids will require cutting billions from the other districts' funding or raising taxes.
In other words, it's time to obfuscate things and confuse everyone.
When Rep. Kent Grusendorf's House Bill 2 was released, it surprised few that it wouldn't eliminate the "recapture" provision entirely but would let the wealthy districts keep 65 percent of what they now share with others.
HB 2 also guarantees that all school systems will get what they are getting now, plus 3 percent.
But it also would change "enrichment funding" — extra money determined by how heavily a district taxes itself — in a way that, together with the changes to the recapture provision, would dramatically increase the difference between what rich and poor districts would spend per kid.
Additionally, the bill would change the funding mechanism for "special population programs" for bilingual, compensatory and special education students who cost substantially more to educate.
The current "weighting" formula that provides extra resources for these students would be replaced with set dollar premiums that subsequent Legislatures would have to reset every two years.
Altogether, these measures would immediately widen the funding gap between rich and poor districts, and, over time, the disparities would grow even more.
Let's quit playing around. Everybody knows what this is about.
Texas has had one of the nation's largest and fastest-growing school-age populations for years but the state's share of school funding has dropped to less than 40 percent of the total.
"The state of Texas defaulted in its responsibility to fund education, and that has forced higher local property tax rates and created the crisis we now face," says María "Cuca" Robledo, head of Intercultural Development Research Association, an education think tank.
Texas' 288,286 teachers are already teaching 4.2 million schoolchildren, of which 52 percent are economically disadvantaged, 15 percent speak limited English and 60 percent are minorities.
The percentage of kids with special, costlier educational needs is growing, not shrinking. How well these kids do now will determine Texas' economic future.
Most disturbing about HB 2 is that it would establish "accreditation-based funding," a radically different system that would provide only the funding sufficient for schools to meet a lowered standard of an "adequate" education.
"Just as there is no such thing as 'separate but equal,' there is no such thing as 'unequal but adequate,'" said former Texas District Judge F. Scott McCown.
And he's right.
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To contact Carlos Guerra, call (210) 250-3545 or e-mail cguerra@express-news.net.
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http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/columnists/cguerra/stories/MYSA030105.01B.Guerra.f36be2e2.html
This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
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