The REC adopted
a forecast that predicted $129 million more in revenue for finish up this
year, and $155 million more available for the next. It appears part of the
former amount ought to be spoken for, according to testimony
given by Education Superintendent John White, stemming from the recent
court decision that invalidated the funding mechanism for the state’s scholarship
voucher program.
As part of that, the state’s Supreme Court also redefined that legislative
instrument responsible for funding the state’s Minimum Foundation Program,
calling it really like a law despite its legal designation as a resolution. The
MFP is a formula created by the Board of
Elementary and Secondary Education, which employs White, to direct state
funding to school district operating expenses and must be accepted or rejected
by the Legislature by concurrent resolution prior to the end of a regular
session. If rejected, the previous year’s formula remains in place.
By terming the resolution akin to a law, this meant a different set of rules
for legislative action on it applied in its passage in 2012. According to those
rules, unknowingly the Legislature did not have enough votes to pass the
measure given its timing in the legislative session, as all
indications were it was following the correct procedure. Thus, with the
2012 MFP formula not in effect, then funding must be done on the basis of the
2011 formula.
According to White, the 2011 formula will cost the state $30 million
for this year, and another $27 million potentially for next year. That prompted
the Senate Education
Committee that he addressed to ask BESE to redo the 2013 formula.
Previously, BESE chairman Chas Roemer said the current 2013 formula should
serve. The funding dispute originated because the 2012 formula included funding
for families who sent their children to private schools on the program, but
Roemer said with the court’s redefinition in essence the headcounts on which
the figures were computed would decrease and therefore that would reduce the
total appropriation by an amount that then separately could be appropriated for
the program.
Assuming this happens, then out of this year’s surplus could come the
$30 million, and also the $45 million White now says will be needed for next
year’s program operation. That would be the best strategy with only 45 days to
go in this fiscal year, to make up for the 2011 formula-induced gap, and then
bank the rest for next fiscal year – not only to fund the program, but also to
pay for a possible major faulty assumption made by the “hawk”-induced budget
that passed the House of Representatives.
That’s because this budget not only counted upon $90 million of that
surplus being realized – leaving available from this year carried forward and
for next year $164 million – but also a tax amnesty that it values at $200
million for operating expenses for next fiscal year. Unlike past amnesties,
with the most recent being in 2001 and 2009, the proposed 2013 version is to
last greater than a few months, 24 to 30 in fact.
That unusual aspect was chosen as an attempt to dodge statutory and constitutional
requirements, which state that the REC must make a declaration of recurring or
nonrecurring portions of an amnesty, with the former being money accelerated in
collection and the latter being funds that otherwise never would have been
collected. In 2009, it estimated that haul was comprised of about half and
half. This length of the program life was selected to make it appear that all
collected would count for recurring funds, crucial because with the length of
time of tax years covered (four years since the last as opposed to eight previously)
one could expect half the ultimate take, and if half again is deemed nonrecurring,
that’s only around $125 million.
And it may not even be that much. With a much longer window involved,
payments may be backloaded and less would come in for the upcoming fiscal year.
Also, some may not come in because with this being the third amnesty in a dozen
years, scofflaws may have become “trained” to resist paying up now hoping for a
relatively quick future replication.
But the most compelling reason to doubt the existence of $200 million
ready to be plugged in comes from comments by one of the four members of the
REC, economist James Richardson, a faculty member at Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge who serves as the nonpolitical appointee to the REC, which also has
the Speaker of the House, President of the Senate, and governor, or their
designees, serving on it. Decisions made on the recognition of funds must be by
unanimous consent.
Richardson has announced that he is extremely
dubious that all of the amnesty funds could be classified as recurring.
Unless he changes his opinion, some significant portion of them will be
declared as nonrecurring. If that happens, unless that is budgeted, then a big budgetary
hole would open up probably early next year. And the other three will come
around to his way of thinking because otherwise all of the money is
unrecognized for any use, period.
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