Local Enrichment Levies. School districts are authorized to raise funds locally through enrichment levies, which are voter approved and limited in duration. A district's maximum enrichment levy is limited to the lesser of $2.50 per $1,000 of assessed value or the maximum per pupil limit, which is $2,500 per pupil for districts with fewer than 40,000 students and $3,000 per pupil for districts with 40,000 or more students. A school district's prior school year average annual full-time equivalent enrollment (FTE enrollment) is used for determining the maximum per pupil limit.
In 2021, the Legislature revised the enrichment levy formulas for the 2022 calendar year, requiring that 2019-20 enrollment be used in place of 2020-21 enrollment if the 2019-20 enrollment was greater and the district was open for in-person instruction to all students by the beginning of the 2021-22 school year.
Local Effort Assistance. Local effort assistance (LEA), also known as levy equalization, is state funding provided to a school district that does not generate an enrichment levy of at least $1,550 per student when levying at a rate of $1.50 per $1,000 of assessed value. An eligible school district's maximum LEA amount is the difference between the district's per pupil levy amount, based on a rate of $1.50 per $1,000 of assessed value, and $1,550 per pupil, multiplied by the district's FTE enrollment. Districts that are eligible for LEA, but levy below a $1.50 per $1,000 rate receive LEA in proportion to their actual levy collection. A school district's prior school year FTE enrollment is used for determining LEA eligibility and calculating maximum local effort assistance.
Local Enrichment Levies. The revisions to the enrichment levy formulas authorized in 2021 are extended for the 2023 and 2024 calendar years. In the 2023 calendar year, 2019-20 enrollment must be used in place of the district's 2021-22 school year enrollment if the 2019-20 enrollment was greater and the district was open for in-person instruction to all students by the beginning of the 2021-22 school year. In the 2024 calendar year, 2019-20 enrollment must be used in place of the district's 2022-23 school year enrollment if the 2019-20 enrollment was greater and the district was open for in-person instruction to all students by the beginning of the 2021-22 school year.
Local Effort Assistance. For determining LEA eligibility and calculating maximum local effort assistance in the 2022 calendar year, prior school year means the 2019-20 school year if the 2019-20 enrollment is greater than the 2020-21 enrollment. For determining LEA eligibility and calculating maximum local effort assistance in the 2023 calendar year, prior school year means the 2019-20 school year if the 2019-20 enrollment is greater than the 2021-22 enrollment.
PRO: The levy hold harmless is important as enrollment is down and the committee knows why. The hold harmless must be addressed in statute and cannot be done in the budget like the enrollment stabilization. The funding would help alleviate the impacts to schools. Lower enrollment during an emergency does not result in less work for staff and stabilizing the funding is critical. Enrollments are down but not because the kids are gone but rather are temporarily not enrolled so addressing the temporary instability is important. The decline in enrollment results in less funding but the expenses have stayed "normal" during this time which is why this is an important bill. Having the levy hold harmless through 2024 is very important for stability to avoid disruptions in delivery of education to students. Some school boards report, a steady recovery of enrollment stabilization will provide temporary stability while things slowly return to normal. Small rural districts have a hard time filling vacancies and having to temporarily lay of staff due to budget reductions could be extra challenging for the small rural districts. There are bargaining contracts already in place with teachers for the coming year and those contracts have to be met, which is why this funding is important.
CON: At home learning has resulted in more parents seeing what is going on at the schools and resulted in parents removing their children from public school. Funding should be based on actual enrollment and if children are leaving, the districts need to determine why and address the issues. The public schools are failing, parents are unhappy and the test scores are way down; school districts and OSPI need to address this problem and not fund chairs that aren't full. On average students are funded $17,000 per pupil and the taxpayer dollars should not go to fund missing kids.