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Home » California Schools Risk “Colossal” Loss Of Dollars As Enrollment Drops – MDUSD Expects To Issue Layoff Notices

California Schools Risk “Colossal” Loss Of Dollars As Enrollment Drops – MDUSD Expects To Issue Layoff Notices

by CLAYCORD.com
41 comments

By Joe Hong – CalMatters

As they await the release of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed 2022-23 state budget, school district officials across California are worried about losing millions of dollars all at once, resulting in staffing cuts in a time when students need more attention than ever.

After two years of not being penalized for declining enrollment during the pandemic, school districts are bracing for a sudden drop in revenues next year as their funding gets recalibrated to match current enrollment, which plummeted since COVID-19 first closed California’s schools.

“I’ve never ever seen a drop in enrollment come all at once like this,” said Andy Johnsen, superintendent at San Marcos Unified in north San Diego County. “The pandemic changed everything.”

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In 2020, state lawmakers decided to allow districts to use their pre-pandemic, 2019-20 enrollment and attendance figures to calculate their funding for the next two school years. But starting in the fall of 2022, funding levels will be determined by this year’s enrollment and attendance.

“Just to put it into perspective, we lost a few hundred students each year before the pandemic,” said Harold Sullins, an associate superintendent at San Bernardino City Unified School District. “Last year, we declined by 2,000 students. That’s about eight years’ worth of decline.”

Without assistance from the state, San Bernardino City Unified could lose $27 million in funding due to the enrollment decline, a hefty chunk of the district’s $971 million budget. Districts statewide stand to take similar blows.

The impact of such cuts can vary by district. It could mean laying off employees or cutting language and art programs. Ultimately, it’ll mean eliminating services many students need, especially in the coming years as they try to recover from the challenges of virtual learning.

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In 2018-19, California schools statewide lost about 23,000 students. Between the 2019-20 and 2020-21 school years, public school enrollment in California dropped by nearly seven times that figure, with more than 160,000 students dropping out.

To calculate what it pays to individual districts each year, the state uses average daily attendance, so not only does enrollment matter but so does making sure students are in class every day. A new bill introduced on Monday by state Sen. Anthony Portantino, a San Fernando Valley Democrat, seeks to change this policy and fund schools based on enrollment, which would generate $3 billion for schools statewide.

Before COVID-19, low birth rates and migration patterns caused the annual shrinkage of public school enrollment. During the pandemic, kindergarten enrollment fell by about 61,000 students, accounting for much of the overall decline.

“Kindergarten is not compulsory,” Sullins said. “At our earlier grade levels, a lot of our parents opted to hold their students back.”

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When physical classrooms reopened in the fall of 2021, stringent rules about quarantine and independent study also hurt attendance. Districts failing to offer independent study to students in quarantine were required to count those pupils as absent, losing out on their attendance-based funding. Sullins said this policy had a “tremendous impact” on attendance rates.

District leaders said a sudden drop in funding would punish districts for both drops in enrollment caused by the pandemic and for failing to comply with unreasonable independent study requirements.

“The public doesn’t understand,” said Lisa Gonzales, the chief business officer at Mt. Diablo Unified.

“We’re all facing colossal funding decreases next year.”

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Gonzales said her 30,000-student, Northern California district could lose $24 million if the state does nothing.

Gonzales declined to comment on exactly where the district would make cuts, but she said she expects to issue layoff notices. She said when making cuts, school districts first figure out what they absolutely need to keep by law, like a teacher in every classroom and transportation for students with disabilities. Then they look at how they could enlarge class sizes and eliminate certain positions.

“You don’t have to have a librarian and a counselor,” she said. “Are they important and valuable? Absolutely.”

Administrators interviewed by CalMatters raised several possible solutions, but they fell under two general categories — and seek to take advantage of the fact that the state anticipates a big budget surplus.

First, the state could increase overall funding to schools by adjusting the formula that determines most of the money districts receive from the state. The formula consists of “base” funding for all students and additional “supplemental” and “concentration” grants for districts serving English learners, foster children and students qualifying for free or reduced-price meals.

“In an ideal world, what would benefit is an increase to the base,” Gonzales said. “It could reverse the attendance issue we’re having.”

A second option: The state could cut funding gradually, giving districts more time to downsize.

A spokesperson for the governor declined to comment on the contents of the forthcoming proposed budget.

The state Legislature is aware of the fiscal crisis looming over districts.

Mike Fine, the chief executive officer of the state’s Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, spoke at a Nov. 30 hearing for the state Assembly’s Education Finance Subcommittee and recommended that districts be temporarily funded based on their three-year average attendance rates.

Fine said that pre-pandemic, about 60 percent of districts were declining. Last year, all but one of the 58 counties in the state had a decline.

The governor and Legislature have tried to help districts recover from the pandemic. The 2021-22 state budget ushered historic investments in K-12 education. Much of that went to ongoing funding like sending more money to districts with higher concentrations of at-risk students.

Jonathan Kaplan, a senior policy analyst at the California Budget & Policy Center, said these commitments signal that lawmakers in Sacramento are aware of just how hard some communities were hit by COVID-19.

“The governor and Legislature deserve credit,” Kaplan said. “The bump in the concentration grant acknowledged there’s a legitimate need out there. Students in these communities need support.”

Even so, both the state and local districts underestimated just how low enrollments and attendance rates would plummet this year.

“Could they have really known there was going to be such large numbers of students who weren’t coming?” said Kaplan. “Could they really know how much hardship there would be? I don’t think so.”

41 comments


Bruh January 7, 2022 - 2:12 PM - 2:12 PM

Start cutting the pricey admin payroll first before anyone is let go. An admins salary should come all the way down to that of the average teacher before any cuts are made.

People on public salaries should have their pay adjusted to match the current economic climate.

If the economic climate changes so should their salary. If enrollment drops, and therefore the budget, their salary should drop an equal percentage since they have less students to handle. This goes across the board to teachers, admin, janitor etc..Adding an incentive to keep kids in school and teachers at work would go a long way to improving their attitude, and we know the state of California likes to use carrots.

After all don’t we all have to sacrifice in the face of this unprecedented economic climate change?

BOOYAH! January 7, 2022 - 2:31 PM - 2:31 PM

Wow. The Chinese are winning.

Bishop Estates January 7, 2022 - 2:35 PM - 2:35 PM

This is crazy and so are the times we are living in. Mixed messages coming from those in charge at the State level. Dont send kids if you think they are sick (understandable) but then lets take funding away from schools because they are trying to keep staff and kids safe.
I feel for the teachers and administraion, they just cant win.

Why would anyone want to go into teaching when they see how undervalued they are by those in charge in Sacramento.

I thought I heard California is looking at a budget surplus, so why on earth would they cut funding, makes no sense.

Never Enough January 7, 2022 - 3:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Budget surplus was 2021 budget and only because CA had 75B in stimulus for Covid and state budgets.

Now it’s time to pay the piper. But in reality if you have so many less kids why do you need the same funding?

Bishop Estates Too January 7, 2022 - 3:52 PM - 3:52 PM

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Sam January 7, 2022 - 5:02 PM - 5:02 PM

💥💥💥 MANDOWN!!

Parent January 8, 2022 - 8:10 PM - 8:10 PM

Maybe instead of giving ever student in the district free hot breakfast and lunch they should have used that money wisely. This school district is going to crash a burn.

Torcofuel January 7, 2022 - 2:49 PM - 2:49 PM

When quite a few teachers are cramming CRT, Woke, socialism and so on the kids in school do you really have to ask yourselves what the hell is wrong with the public school systems? It’s rather evident and should come as no surprise enrollment is dropping and not for the reasons that they say it’s dropping.
I think parents are finally getting the F Woke up on all this school bs.

Sam January 7, 2022 - 4:07 PM - 4:07 PM

You have taught a form of CRT in California public schools for at least 30 years. You may call it something different but it’s all the same marxism…FYI

Torcofuel January 7, 2022 - 4:07 PM - 4:07 PM

Oh yes CRT is taught, just cause you don’t happen to see it wherever you teach doesn’t mean it isn’t being done there are many verifiable instances where it is being taught so don’t give us BS it’s not.

Pete V. January 7, 2022 - 4:36 PM - 4:36 PM

@teacher,
Absolute horse****, yes it is…this is the absurd semantics games school boards, admin, and teachers play. Sure, not like it gets rolled out as a unit titled “Critical Race Theory” or “1619 Project”, but those same bats*** crazy America-hating ideals and tenets are absolutely being taught and imbedded in the lectures and lesson plans. Just one of many examples was my daughter having to write an essay on “privilege in math”. In her Calculus class. Then there’s her cat lady leftist soc teacher, and her Antifa history teacher. And that’s just my kid, these stories abound throughout this state and that nation at large.
“We don’t teach it”….hahaha, thanks for the laugh.

Sam January 7, 2022 - 4:53 PM - 4:53 PM

It really just called Critical Theory. It can be applied to any and all aspects of life. It came from the Frankfurt School in Germany. It is the tool of marxists who push socialism. It’s what hitler responded to. This is exactly why they call us nazis and Trump is “literally hitler”. This is the tactic. Socialism has killed untold millions. We’ll keep fighting.

Anon January 7, 2022 - 3:11 PM - 3:11 PM

You had Plenty of warning of what was coming.
You Insisted on CRT, Wokeness and the LGBTQXYZ agenda…….AND PEOPLE RIGHTFULLY PULLED THEIR BABIES OUT OF YOUR SCHOOLS.

bdml January 7, 2022 - 3:49 PM - 3:49 PM

BINGO!!! spot on, they brought this on themselves. I have pulled my kids from the district & gone private. There is plenty of sponsorship if you can’t afford tuition & your child gets a true education not indoctrination. Teacher unions need to be abolished immediately & any teacher refusing to come back needs to be fired.

MDUSD Parent / Teacher January 7, 2022 - 3:53 PM - 3:53 PM

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Sam January 7, 2022 - 4:09 PM - 4:09 PM

You have taught a form of CRT in California public schools for at least 30 years. You may call it something different but it’s all the same marxism…FYI. Be a grown up and admit it. You got both hands deep in the cookie jar acting like you don’t know critical theory is part of teachers lifestyle. To late everyone knows.

Old Timer January 7, 2022 - 3:44 PM - 3:44 PM

Well said Bruh it’s time to start adjusting the freeloading.

WC---Creeker January 7, 2022 - 4:08 PM - 4:08 PM

But project homekey is fully funded… more money to ‘homeless’ solutions now, the rich entitled that attend public schools can suffer.

Build back better?

Cellophane January 7, 2022 - 4:11 PM - 4:11 PM

I didn’t read the above article.

What I did see was enough.

“The public doesn’t understand,” said Lisa Gonzales, the chief business officer at Mt. Diablo Unified.

“We’re all facing colossal funding decreases next year.”

I believe the public does understand.

MDUSD needs some serious realignment to become a district that responds to the people it is supposed to represent.

Gittyup January 7, 2022 - 4:42 PM - 4:42 PM

Like we’re all not “facing colossal funding decreases.”

Sam January 7, 2022 - 4:13 PM - 4:13 PM

It’s just another money grab. Have no fear, gavin will make sure the hormone blockers and critical theory on race won’t run dry in OUR public schools. I’m waiting for the mandatory mandarin to graduate is adopted.

JRocks January 7, 2022 - 4:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Let me get this straight. Less students = we need more money?

“The public doesn’t understand,” No Lisa you don’t understand. The public education system has failed so bad that people are actually moving out of this state, or they are paying for a private education.

Its absolutely incredible that school choice is happening with out vouchers! What does that say to the proponents of our current public education system? Can you imagine the mass exodus from public education if there were vouchers?

Stop funding the teachers union. Let parents choose where and who they want educating their children.

Pete V. January 7, 2022 - 4:46 PM - 4:46 PM

Let’s see, one-party domination that enacts the most idiotic policies that send the cost of living out of control, government-run (“public”) schools indoctrinating students at every level in insane leftist ideology, and top it off with moronic lockdowns, mask mandates, and teachers union fighting to keep from going back in person…GEE, I really wonder why enrollment has dropped so precipitously???

Kali January 7, 2022 - 4:49 PM - 4:49 PM

When they tell children to vaccinate, I already know a few families that will take their child’s schools. So the school will lose students because not all parents do not want to force their children to vaccinate.

T-rex January 7, 2022 - 4:58 PM - 4:58 PM

I know the first teachers that should go. All the ones refusing to go back to work. And secondly, do we get all that taxpayer money back because the schools are “closed”.

NoMoreFreeRide January 7, 2022 - 4:58 PM - 4:58 PM

How about eliminating property taxes for schools on people 65+? Many places around country are now doing this.

Badge1104 January 7, 2022 - 5:36 PM - 5:36 PM

And it’s going to get worse. Wait till this year’s election when Californians will be able to vote for the school voucher system. Most parents are going to take that voucher and send it to a school where their kids can actually learn. The public school system in California, which is the 47th worst in the nation, will probably collapse. Their only chance is to make a total change of course in how and what they teach. That, unfortunately, probably will never happen because they are so set in their failed practices and dogmas.

Oh, please January 7, 2022 - 5:56 PM - 5:56 PM

HAHA! I hope MDUSD falls apart so that something even marginally better can rise. Worst district and some of the most horrible trustees. FAIL, you scum district. FAIL.

ConcordRes2 January 8, 2022 - 7:02 AM - 7:02 AM

You need to look at all the waste within MDUSD they have full time painters and landscapers making a 6 figure salary more than the teachers. You can’t do anything because of the unions. If it was treaded as a business you would hire companies to preform the maintenance services so you could focus on education. It won’t change until they lose the students to private schools.

Exit 12A January 7, 2022 - 6:10 PM - 6:10 PM

.
School vouchers NOW!
.

TPC January 7, 2022 - 6:30 PM - 6:30 PM

Gonzales is an over paid hack from the Robert Martinez days.

Chris January 7, 2022 - 6:48 PM - 6:48 PM

No to worry. The Democrats will figure out a way to extort more of our money through new or increasing taxes to make up for the loss.

ChuckStir January 7, 2022 - 7:08 PM - 7:08 PM

You get what you vote for.

Randy January 7, 2022 - 7:14 PM - 7:14 PM

,, good – start with the lazy irresponsible teachers.. lay them off quickly please

Mika January 7, 2022 - 7:41 PM - 7:41 PM

Time to consolidate schools with lowest enrollment, stop sending employees on travel, tighten up on office supply purchases, stop letting teachers use their sick days and accompanying substitute teachers costs for long weekends and/or vacations, start brainstorming MDUSD, it’s coming!

Glen223 January 7, 2022 - 7:59 PM - 7:59 PM

Lisa ought to be the one to be kicked to the curb. Just another lazy bureaucrat.

Cynic January 7, 2022 - 10:33 PM - 10:33 PM

There was a legitimate effort to break off last of the MDUSD a few years back and it was stopped by a radical leftist teacher from Northgate who turned it into a race issue. She is all about CRT and 1619, but now she’s developing educational materials for the whole state or even country. She got run out of her teaching job because her former friends and neighbors turned on her because she called them racist for supporting a new district. The public education system is simply a liberal indoctrination program. We on a third generation of victims. Down with the public education system, up with school choice!

Pete V. January 8, 2022 - 11:26 AM - 11:26 AM

The unfortunate thing is that whack teacher and her fellow traveler “activists” browbeat enough of the wealthy and upper-middle-class wimpy white parents to vote against their and their kids best interests, all because they were terrified of being called a racist for breaking off from the s-hole known as MDUSD. We’ve had multiple kids at Foothill and Northgate so I know these people, I saw it firsthand.

Reality January 8, 2022 - 9:38 AM - 9:38 AM

This will continue. I pay more in tuition each month than my mortgage. It’s worth it. Those of you wondering why I would do that when you’re enjoying a “free” government education….how free is it when they’re training your kids for 6 hours a day that you’re a terrible person…..even if it’s inadvertent and you’re unaware of it? That you’re heritage is evil and should be torn down? I’d say that’s a pretty heavy cost. Just don’t forget this when you’re sitting around the Thanksgiving dinner table with your 18 year old who explains why the history of your family is so terrible and America is a terrible country. Yeah, that tuition sounds like a bargain in balance.

chuckie the troll January 8, 2022 - 11:21 AM - 11:21 AM

Fire every teacher who fails to show up to work. There, problem solved!

The Fearless Spectator January 9, 2022 - 6:43 PM - 6:43 PM

These people are really dense. You can only pi** on people’s shoes for so long before they say “enough”. If they were able to ratchet back the stupid shi* just 20%, they wouldn’t be in this predicament.

But as typical, they just ride the horse into the wall……it’s a leftist thing…..
.


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