In a 6-1 decision, the Court ruled that the
Constitution said that the funding, dollars given to families to purchase
education at participating public and private schools, could not be part of the
Minimum Foundation Program that funds public education. The MFP is created by formula
approved by the Board of Elementary and
Secondary Education and ratified by the Legislature to distribute general
fund tax dollars to the 70 independent agencies (including any charter schools
within them) involved in educating at this level.
For last
year, that program funding is estimated to be about $22 million for the
almost 5,000 students taking part. For this
year, with an expected 3,000 additional students at present with the chance
that more could come, expenses could be closer to $40 million, although this is
contingent on nonpublic school pricings. Because those levels charged cannot
exceed the MFP average, the state saved $18 million last year through this
program.
The decision means that the state would have to find funding through
other means than the MFP, which this year is on track to take nearly half of all
general fund spending as over 90 percent of its $3.4 billion is targeted to
come from that. Yet even in a difficult budget environment that will should not
be hard.
One collateral benefit coming from current
vigorous debate over the budget is the realization that options exist to
carve out the presumed $40 million, perhaps most easily from the MFP itself. Last
year’s version’s language could be changed easily to prevent the amount of
money from the program from going into the MFP and left in the general fund for
program participants. Given that Jindal strongly supports the program and that
nine of the 11 members of BESE regularly have voted favorably in reference to
that program on past matters, this is a realistic political course.
However, the legislature must approve of the package, without being
able to amend it (although it may return it to BESE with recommendations for
amending). That issue also was addressed by the Court, as part of the case
involved whether a vote of the majority present or a majority of the seated
membership of a chamber was required for passage; the resolution received the
former but not the latter. Exercising some judicial activism, the Court took an
expansive view of the measure containing the MFP formula, which technically is
a resolution, and promoted it to having “the effect of law,” despite the fact
that the Constitution was vague on this issue and that other ancillary sources
like the House Rules suggested
that it did not. In essence, the Court took the liberty of creating a new
kind of resolution unspecified in the Constitution that acts like a law.
What this means for now is that at least 53 representatives and 20
senators would have to approve of the MFP if it appears this way. There’s
already a version
out, but it would have to be rewritten and acted upon expeditiously (the former of which seems to be the approach although BESE has yet to schedule the necessary special meeting to do so), because another
implication of the Court’s novel redefinition is that the measure would require
a two-thirds vote to pass if not accomplished by both chambers by three days to
the end of the session. With majorities in each chamber that have been
supportive of the program in the past, this new MFP formula ought to pass each
(if supporters are rallied to be there for the vote, which did not happen last
time as it was on the final day of the session that the House concurred.)
But if it did not get one or both of these majorities, this plan still
could work, because then the state must fall back on the prior year’s MFP, the
content of which was ruled invalidly passed, meaning they would have to fall
back on the 2011-12
version. And that by its formula may allow enough of a carve-out from the
general fund that ordinarily would have gone into the MFP, given the formula
inputs of two years later, for the program without requiring extra money cobbled
from other sources attached to the general fund.
Yet even if it did not, alternatives remain. For example, one budget alternative
floated was to excise 15 percent from the motion picture investor tax credit, a
wasteful program that pads the pockets of high-income earners and non-citizens
that returns only one dollar to the state for every seven transferred to those
interests. Also wasteful is solar and
wind energy credits, which have an even worse return of about one buck for
every 20 diverted from taxpayers to a small cabal of solar installation
companies. Those two
by themselves attenuated by this proportion probably could pay for the
program.
ReplyDeleteNo. "What this means" is that the Governor, and you, championed an obviously (6-1) UNCONSTITUTIONAL attempted seachange in education BY TAKING THE MONEY FROM THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS that you demonize every day.
What good guys you are!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteYOU SHOULD ADD REP. STEVE CARTER AND SEN. CONRAD APEL TO THIS GROUP OF "GOOD GUYS"!!!!