Mountain Times
September 11, 2014
Dear Editor,
After
reading Gov. Shumlin’s letter to Rebecca Holcombe, secretary for the
Vermont Agency of Education, dated Aug. 19, 2014, which outlines
initiatives he hopes she and the Agency will pursue on his behalf to
advance progress this year, I was confused on a number of topics.
Shumlin
refers to the fact that many schools benefit from the “hold harmless
provision,” which limits declines in enrollment used for school funding
to 3.5 percent per year. Meaning that if a school looses more students,
they are not penalized financially for the additional losses in their
enrollment. This, in essence means we (the taxpayers) are paying schools
additional money to educate students that don’t actually exist. Which
raises the questions: exactly how many imaginary kids we’re funding as a
state?
Schools that have seen a
dramatic decrease in numbers over the past few years are assumably
being funded by this provision almost entirely, as they have not been
required to cut back as much as such as a decline in student enrollment
should warrant.
The governor
also mentions that between FY1997 and FY2014, enrollment K-12 has
dropped from 103,000 to 79,600 students, do those numbers include
imaginary kids?
When Shumlin
now says that this formula will be adjusted over next few years so that
we are in fact not paying for imaginary students, does that mean that
the schools for whom this provision has aided have caught up to the real
numbers over time? Or that this provision is being eliminated and those
schools should prepare for the dramatic loss of funding?
On
a side note, I find it funny that actual students that are tuitioned
into our schools do not count toward our equalized pupil ratio, but
imaginary kids do…
If this
program is indeed going to continue, can we get some of these imaginary
students to help with our budget, which in turn will help with our
property taxes?
Jim Haff, Killington
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