And we're off!
Let me hasten to add: WE ALREADY KNEW THIS. Seriously, anyone who has been anywhere near a school budget knows that all ESSER funding remaining (that's ESSER III) has to be obligated by September of 2024*. Since the vast majority of any school district's spending in a fiscal year (starting July 1) happens AFTER September, that means that that this current (FY24) year, through next summer is really the chance to spend it.
Again, we knew this.
It does mean, though, that any remaining ESSER spending that isn't one time (HVAC fixes, buses, curriculum, masks, cleaning supplies) or short term (a one or two time summer program), either needs a new way to be funded--this is probably going to be the general fund--or is going to be cut.
Again, I don't think that this is going to surprise school business officials, superintendents, or school committees. For members of the public that maybe thought a summer program might continue, or an after school program was longer term, it might come as a surprise.
I am mostly, honestly, putting this one here out of obligation, incidentally. We've had alarmist headlines since day one on ESSER, most of which have been very far removed from district-level decision-making, and so this has been, I think, poorly communicated from those outside of school districts from the beginning.
And if you are in a school district, I'd recommend being sure your community understands where you're at with ESSER and what it ending is going to mean for your district.
Let me start by noting here that projecting budget revenue is absolutely not my job and thank goodness. One thing you learn, though, if you hang around enough state consensus revenue hearings** is that there's really only so much we actually know about how much money we're going to have next year. Those who make these projections draw on what is known, what past experience has been, try to fill in what we don't know...and they make their best prognostication based on that.
One thing on which they draw is what is currently happening with state revenue now.
You may have missed it, as it happened the same day Congressional Republicans were challenging people to fistfights, but the most recent revenue numbers, for the first four months of FY24, are running behind projections (that's State House News shared by the Franklin Chronicle) (already):
Massachusetts' tax revenue collections are $355 million behind where state government expected them be four months into fiscal year 2024 and while Administration and Finance Secretary Matthew Gorzkowicz said Tuesday he's not especially worried, a key lawmaker said less than an hour later that he is "very concerned" about the state's fiscal picture.
Who is concerned? The Senate Ways and Means Chair:
Rodrigues, who has been the Senate's budget lead for nearly five years, said this is the first stretch during his time as Ways and Means chairman that tax collections have missed benchmark four months in a row. Coming up short by a cumulative $20 million after two months was not worrying, he said, but September and October's shortfalls raised his eyebrows.
He said the latest revenue numbers have been "quite disconcerting," even though the consensus revenue growth figure he, Gorzkowicz and House Ways and Means Chairman Aaron Michlewitz agreed to for fiscal year 2024 is a "very conservative" 1.6 percent increase.
"We are still falling short of that to date. So we are very concerned, which means that we are very, very careful," Rodrigues said as part of his detailing of the supplemental budget before the Senate.
I'm just saying this isn't a comfortable spot to be in November.
And what's that? That's a measurement of how much state and local governments are spending, quarter over quarter, and year over year.
If you think about it, it does make some sense that this would have slowed down from last year, right? The federal pandemic aid is being used up (state and local, remember), and so that big push we had to make sure that a) all the money got spent but also b) the needs were being met has waned. And I'm sure there are those who make their living writing on this who would have more to say.
But the main changes in the foundation budget underlying the changes due to the Student Opportunity Act always are enrollment changes from one year to the next in your district, and the inflation rate.
**you have your hobbies; I have mine.
***see line 26.
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