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 and updated inflation-adjusted values are provided in the operating budget. 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, as listed in the operating budget, 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 $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.
PRO: MSOC will help every district across the state with rising costs that they have no control over. For example, four years ago insurance costs were $142 million and this year they are $228 million. This is a modest step in what we can do to help districts with their loss of students and loss of COVID relief dollars. Children can't learn until their basic needs are met. The real need is $400/student and this bill provides $21/student. This is a small step compared to the overall need. MSOC allocations have failed to keep pace with inflation. It is not an issue of mismanagement, it is a lack of resources. There is a 30-60 percent funding gap for MSOC in Whatcom County school districts.
CON: More money is not the problem. The average per-student dollar amount has doubled but educators continue to underperform, which is reflected in the OSPI report card. Raising the budget will not raise academics. 45 percent of state taxes go to the public school system already. Education rot starts in the Legislature.
OTHER: Each year insurance and utilities increase anywhere from 9-54 percent.
PRO: Representative Steve Bergquist, Prime Sponsor; Melissa Gombosky, Spokane, Evergreen, Vancouver and Richland School District; Jim Kowalkowski, Rural Education Center; Nikki Lockwood, Washington State School Directors' Association; Charlie Brown, South Sound Superintendents and Skills Centers Directors; Mitch Denning, Alliance of Educational Associations; Doug Vanderleest, WA Asssociation of Maintenance and Operation Administrators; Justin Mckaughan; James Everett, Meridian School District.