Educational Staff Associates.
Individuals with educational staff associate (ESA) certificates provide education and health services to students. There are nine ESA roles including: school counselor, school nurse, school psychologist, and school social worker. Any individual employed by a public school as an ESA must hold a valid ESA certificate for the role, with the exception of school nurses employed at school districts with fewer than 2,000 students.
School districts may also contract with non-employees for nursing, counseling, psychology, and social work services. Individuals contracted for these services are not required to hold valid ESA certificates unless they are supporting students with disabilities with services listed on an individualized education program.
Prototypical School Funding Model Allocations.
The prototypical school funding model allocates general apportionment funding to school districts based on assumed levels of staff and other resources necessary to support "prototypical" elementary, middle, and high schools. These prototypical schools are assumed to have the following full-time student enrollments: 400 students for elementary school; 432 students for middle school; and 600 students for high school. In addition to other allocations, for each prototypical school, the model includes minimum allocations for the following types of staff:
Elementary | Middle | High | |
School nurses | 0.076 | 0.060 | 0.096 |
Social workers | 0.042 | 0.006 | 0.015 |
Psychologists | 0.017 | 0.002 | 0.007 |
Guidance counselors | 0.493 | 1.216 | 2.539 |
Classified staff providing student and staff safety | 0.079 | 0.092 | 0.141 |
Parent involvement coordinators | 0.0825 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
Discretionary Spending of Allocations.
Subject to some limits, the funding provided to school districts through the prototypical school funding model is for allocation purposes only. This means that school districts have discretion over spending decisions and can, for example, use funding allocated for nurses to hire teachers, to purchase technology, or on other costs. However, there are exceptions to this discretionary spending allowance, including that funding for average kindergarten through grade 3 (K-3) class sizes may be provided only to the extent of and proportionate to the school districts' demonstrated actual class size in grades K-3, up to the funded class sizes.
Additional Allocations for School Staff.
In addition to the staffing units provided through the prototypical school funding model, certain additional staffing units are specified in statute. The additional staffing units must be allocated to school districts to the extent that the additional units are specifically appropriated and designated for those staff in the omnibus operating appropriations act. For example, the following additional staffing units are specified in statute:
Elementary | Middle | High | |
School nurses | 0.5090 | 0.8280 | 0.7280 |
Social workers | 0.2690 | 0.0820 | 0.1120 |
Psychologists | 0.0870 | 0.0220 | 0.0420 |
Guidance counselors | 0.0070 | 0.7840 | 0.9610 |
Classified staff providing student and staff safety | 0.0000 | 0.6080 | 1.1590 |
Parent involvement coordinators | 0.9175 | 1.0000 | 1.0000 |
Required Staff in Schools.
Each public school must have at least one school nurse and one counselor on site, dedicated to serving the students of that public school.
Prototypical School Funding Model Allocations.
Beginning September 1, 2022, the minimum allocations in the prototypical school funding model are increased for the following staff types:
Elementary | Middle | High | |
Nurses | 0.246 | 0.336 | 0.339 |
Social workers | 0.311 | 0.088 | 0.127 |
Psychologists | 0.104 | 0.024 | 0.049 |
Counselors | 0.993 | 1.716 | 3.039 |
In addition to the minimum allocations specified above, the following additional staffing units must be provided for nurses in the 2023-24 school year:
Elementary | Middle | High | |
Nurses | 0.170 | 0.276 | 0.243 |
Beginning September, 1, 2024, the minimum allocations in the prototypical school funding model for nurses are increased again to:
Elementary | Middle | High | |
Nurses | 0.585 | 0.888 | 0.824 |
Exceptions to Discretionary Spending of Allocations.
Funding, up to the combined minimum allocations, for nurses, social workers, psychologists, counselors, classified staff providing student and staff safety, and parent involvement coordinators through the prototypical school funding model may be allocated only to the extent of and proportionate to a school district's demonstrated actual ratios of: full-time equivalent physical, social, and emotional support staff (PSES staff) to full-time equivalent students. "Physical, social, and emotional support staff" include nurses, social workers, psychologists, counselors, classified staff providing student and staff safety, parent involvement coordinators, and other school district employees and contractors who provide physical, social, and emotional support to students as defined by the Superintendent of Public Instruction (SPI).
The SPI must adopt rules to implement these provisions and the rules must require school districts to prioritize funding allocated for PSES staff who hold a valid educational staff associate (ESA) certificate appropriate for the staff's role.
Implementation Reports.
By February 1, 2023, 2025, 2027, and 2029, the SPI must submit to the Legislature a report that:
For the analysis, the SPI must use personnel data reported on or around October 1 of the report year and the prior year, and any other relevant data. For the report due February 1, 2023, the SPI must complete the analysis only to the extent that relevant data are available.
The substitute bill makes the following substantive changes to the original bill:
(In support) The United States Surgeon General recently stated that our nation's youth is in a mental health crisis. Twenty percent of high school students have a suicide plan and half of those students attempted suicide in 2018. While they have largely been spared the direct effects of the COVID-19 virus, children have suffered physical isolation, school disruption, ongoing uncertainty, and fear of illness. More than 140,000 children have lost a caregiver during the COVID-19 pandemic. Adolescent depression has doubled since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and emergency room visits for attempted suicide, especially among adolescent girls, has increased by 50 percent. Anxiety and depression does not look the same in kids as it does in adults; it often looks like destructive behaviors and acting out in kids.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic some students came to school with multiple adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), now nearly every student from preschool to higher education has at least one ACE. These ACEs affect students' physical, behavioral, social, emotional, mental and intellectual health. Educators received training on trauma-informed care to support the needs of students, but educators, families, and administrators rely heavily on a higher tiered level of support that is provided by school psychologists, counselors, nurses, and other educational staff associates.
Students' physical and mental well-being is critical to their education. Students and their families say that caring adult relationships and support for mental health are needed by students. Building administrators are overwhelmed managing students' mental and behavioral health challenges as well as supporting their academics. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a scarcity of nurses, counselors, and other staff who provide specialized help to students in schools. Full-time, registered, school nurses are integral to providing comprehensive supports to students and to link the most vulnerable and marginalized populations to the only health care they may receive. School counselors can provide physical, social, and emotional support, but often spend much of their time on career development and supporting academic needs.
A school without trauma-informed professionals, such as counselors, social workers, nurses, and safety staff, is a severe health issue. Local districts and parent teacher associations that can afford it pay for additional staff. Without an increase in the prototypical school funding model, all students will not have the supports they need to be successful in school.
This bill updates the staff ratios in the prototypical school funding model to ensure more realistic state funding of staffing levels. The model was adopted in 2010 with the stated understanding that the staff ratios would need to be regularly updated. However, in the last 12 years, the Legislature has made only minor changes. Although it will take time, all staff ratios should be updated to at least meet the ratios provided in Initiative 1351 adopted by the people in 2014 and recommended by the staffing enrichment work group in 2019.
This bill increases the public's confidence that staff funded by the state for the mental, behavioral, and physical well-being of students will be employed by school districts to serve students. It will also maintain flexibility for school districts to be responsive to local needs.
Increasing funding requires a continued investment, but will provide benefits that far outweigh the costs. It is a matter of equity and a matter of life and death that students have access to nurses, mental health, and counselors daily.
(Opposed) None.
(Other) Adding additional resources to the prototypical school funding model for physical, social, and emotional support is important, but the allocation mechanism needs to be equitably based on student need. The bill proposes to allocate resources equally, but not equitably. A school with a 90 percent poverty rate gets the same allocation for social workers as a school of the same size with a 5 percent poverty rate. There should be recovery with equity.