Concord Monitor
Published: May 12, 2007
Governor's school funding claims are wrong
Lynch should accept my challenge to hold a debate
By Scott F. Johnson
For the Monitor
At the House Finance Committee hearing of the governor's
proposed constitutional amendment, the governor stated,
"No other state is forced to pay the first and
last dollar of an adequate education." That is
not true.
According to the National Access Network, a
national database on school funding information, a number
of other states pay the total costs of an adequate education,
or the cost of components of an adequate education.
Some of these states do not permit "targeting aid"
as part of their adequacy funds, or for components of
adequacy like facilities or teachers. These states include
Washington, Wyoming, Arizona, New Mexico and Tennessee.
Moreover, no state that I am aware of has established
a funding plan that determines an amount for an adequate
education and then expressly pays some communities less
than that amount because of "need" based on
fiscal capacity or property value, which is what the
governor wants to do.
I am also not aware of any court that has sanctioned
this approach.
There are a number of states that target aid for various
reasons, but most of them are not good role models.
They are in protracted litigation over school funding
because of problems with their funding systems. Why
would we want to be like them?
If any state can resolve this issue, it is New Hampshire.
We should set our own standard and be the model for
other states to follow, not change our constitution
to try and be like other states that have not found
a way to resolve the problem.
The governor also stated that the Claremont and Londonderry
court decisions do not allow targeting and "we
need the flexibility to be able to send more money to
the communities most in need." That also is not
true.
The only type of targeting that is not allowed under
the Claremont and Londonderry decisions is targeting
based on "need" as determined by local property
values or local fiscal capacity when those targeted
funds are part of state adequacy funds.
The Claremont and Londonderry decisions allow at least
two forms of targeted aid.
First, the state can target aid within the amounts
provided to pay for adequacy if it bases the targeted
funds on other types of need such as educational costs
and factors that lead to different educational costs
in different communities. For example, the state can
provide more funds to communities with higher percentages
of "at-risk" students, or students receiving
special education services. It could have "weights"
that provide more funds based on certain criteria like
economies of scale or location to take into account
the different cost of services to rural or small communities.
Second, the state can still target aid based on need
as determined by fiscal capacity or property value if
it provides that targeted aid in addition to what it
provides for adequacy funds.
The governor also said that "New Hampshire is
under a stricter court ruling than any other state,
including Massachusetts, where constitutional language
on education funding is all but identical." He
has also said in the past that the Massachusetts court
has sanctioned the use of targeted aid. Those comments
are also not true.
In the last round of litigation in Massachusetts, the
Massachusetts Supreme Court reaffirmed that the state
constitution "impose[s] an enforceable duty on
the magistrates and Legislatures of this Commonwealth
to provide education in the public schools for the children
there enrolled, whether they be rich or poor and without
regard to the fiscal capacity of the community or district
in which such children live."
The governor is making a habit out of strong-arming
elected representatives and providing them with misinformation
to gain their support of the amendment. Such tactics
led Rep. Martha McLeod, a Franconia Democrat and a cosponsor
of the bill, to say at the hearing that "the court
would require the state to send the same aid to New
Castle and Berlin, even though their average incomes
differ fourfold and tax rates are higher by a factor
of six." That simply is not true.
As noted above, the state can send more money to Berlin
than it sends to New Castle without amending the constitution.
To cut through the misinformation, I renew the challenge
I made to the governor at a press conference on Wednesday:
Let's have an open forum where legislators and the public
can ask whatever questions they want, with the governor
and me present to respond and to address each other's
response.
The House and Senate should not waste time trying to
fix an amendment that we don't need. It should instead
focus on finishing the work of defining an adequate
education and then begin the work of determining its
cost.
(Scott F. Johnson of Concord is co-counsel for
the Claremont Coalition.)
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Concord Monitor and New Hampshire Patriot
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