Special education shortfall has districts banding together
Angelique Flores
School districts across Orange County met last week to coordinate
education and lobbying efforts for special education funding. The
districts are following advice from a grand jury report released in
April, which found that the federal government is not fulfilling its
promise to pay 40% of special education costs.
Though the school districts have done informal lobbying with legislation
in the past, the grand jury report recommended a formal cooperative plan
among all the school districts. The report also said that districts
should make parents, staff and the general public aware that the
government isn’t providing sufficient funding to special education.
The meeting was a first step, and officials said the districts have made
no formal plans yet about cooperative lobbying.For 25 years, the
government has never given more than 13% to fund special education,
usually giving an average of 8%, said Huntington Beach City School
District Supt. Duane Dishno.
This past year, officials said Huntington Beach Union High School
District was shortchanged $4 million, Huntington Beach City School
District $1.7 million, Fountain Valley School District $1.1 million, and Ocean View School District $550,000.
“We’re getting 8% of the money. That’s nothing,” Ocean View School
District Supt. James Tarwater said.
Funding has remained constant but hasn’t kept up with the increasing
costs and need for services, said Steve McMahon, Fountain Valley School
District’s superintendent of business administration.
The districts cover the government’s shortfalls by using money from their
general funds, which takes away from education in general.
“It pits regular students against the special education ones,” Huntington
Beach Union High School District Supt. Susan Roper said.
Officials said having to cover the programs’ costs forces districts to
cut from other things such as reading programs, counseling, staffing and
class reduction up to grades eight.
“If I didn’t have to fork it over for this, we’d use it for basic skill
teachers to work with at-risk kids, art teachers, all the computers my
schools would want, interactive television programming... the list just
goes on and on,” said Dishno, whose district could use the money to match
the state funds they need to pay for school repairs and modernization.
Special education serves ages 3 to 21 and can cost three times more than
education for other students, which is about $4,100 per person a year,
Tarwater said. And the costs of the program are rising.
“We try to find the money somewhere. We never tell anybody, we just do
it,” Dishno said.
Officials estimate it has cost the county’s 27 districts more than $70
million over the past 25 years to cover the shortfall in special
education funding.
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