State school funding formulas include allocations per annual average full-time equivalent student for maintenance, supplies, and operating costs (MSOC). There are several categories of MSOC specified in state formulas. For the 2023-24 school year, total general education MSOC per pupil is anticipated to be $1,483.44. The 2023-24 MSOC amounts by category are:
The technology category includes $25 per pupil outside the state's program of basic education that was added in the 2022-23 school year above statutorily required amounts.
Additional MSOC amounts are provided for students in grades 9 through 12 and students enrolled in career and technical education courses and skill centers.
The MSOC per pupil amounts defined in state prototypical formulas are updated in statute to the 2023-24 school year and include a $21 per pupil increase, from $1,483.44 to $1,504.44 per pupil. The increase must be used to address growing costs in the enumerated categories. The $25 per pupil increase provided for technology in 2022-23 is added to statute.
The new 2023-24 general education MSOC per pupil amounts by category are:
The full amount of MSOC provided in the 2023-24 school year under the bill, including additional amounts, must be provided in that school year. The first month's MSOC payment after the bill is enacted must include the additional amounts from the beginning of the 2023-24 school year through that month.
(In support) This bill provides immediate help to districts and will have a positive impact on every school in the state. For larger districts, it can provide anywhere from $1 million to $3 million in support. Costs are increasing because of inflation and other factors school districts cannot control. Districts should not have to use local funds for basic operating costs. While state investments have increased, they have not kept pace with the increasing needs of students. Insurance increases for cybersecurity and liability coverage are staggering. The budget crisis facing districts is about the needs of students. Additional funding in this supplemental year is helpful, but there will be a larger conversation for the next biennial budget about reforming funding.
(Opposed) Students in the state receive $19,000 per pupil on average, $4,000 more than the national average. Funding and teacher salaries have increased significantly over the past decade, but they have not improved student performance. Equitable funding for charter schools and increased innovation and choice are better approaches. Students want a cost-effective system, not one that is coercive and ideological. The focus should be on instruction, rather than issues of mental health, sex, race, and gender. Unions, rather than the lack of money, are the problem. The lack of transparency in district budgets and the use of COVID-19 funds is frustrating. Districts do not know how much funding for MSOC makes it into the classroom. Declining enrollment is the core problem, but few districts are thinking about why it is happening. This bill was rushed. Employees may benefit from the increased funding, but students will not.
(Other) Improving compensation for the lowest wage workers is more important than increasing non-staff funding. While flexibility in funding formulas is typically preferred, it is not the right approach for classified staff.
(In support) Representative Steve Bergquist, prime sponsor; Clifford Traisman, Seattle, Bellevue, Highline, and Northshore Public School Districts; Michelle Harris, Washington State Parent Teacher Association; Jim Kowalkowski, Rural Education Center; Sandy Hayes, Washington State School Directors' Association; Tyler Muench, Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction; and Peter Finch, West Valley School District #208.