Education Week
Published: October 26, 2006
Schools Spend $600 Billion on Facilities, But
Inequities Persist, Report Finds
By LAURA GREIFNER
States and school districts spent almost $600 billion
on building and renovating schools from 1995 to 2004,
an amount that far exceeds earlier expectations, concludes
a report released today.
But the money, by and large, did not go to the disadvantaged
districts that needed it the most, the authors say.
“Our analysis reaffirms our worst suspicions,”
Mary W. Filardo, the executive director of the 21st
Century School Fund, one of the members of the partnership
that produced the report, writes in its foreword. “Despite
record spending on school construction, low-income and
minority students, who already experience disadvantages,
have had far less investment in their school facilities
than their more affluent, white counterparts.”
Besides receiving the least money for facilities, the
report says, high-poverty, predominantly minority districts
were more likely than better-off districts to use the
funds for basic safety needs, such as roof repairs or
asbestos removal. Schools in the more affluent districts
were likelier to spend their money for improvements
intended to directly enhance learning, such as science
laboratories and computer rooms.
Over the 10-year period studied, the most disadvantaged
students received about half as much school construction
aid as their wealthier counterparts, the report estimates.
The researchers divided areas into five brackets based
on median household income and analyzed the amount and
types of construction done in each income bracket.
Spending Disparity
Public school districts built more then 12,000 new
schools and managed more then 130,000 renovation and
improvement projects between 1995 and 2004.
One reason that the report’s estimate of total
expenditures is higher than earlier estimates of need
is that it takes into account previously overlooked
costs, such as land acquisition, furnishings, and interest
payments on loans, according to the study’s authors.
A report issued by the National Education Association
in 2000 estimated that $322 billion was needed to repair
and upgrade the nation’s schools, including construction
of new schools. In a 1995 report, the congressional
watchdog agency now called the Government Accountability
Office put the price tag for school repairs and renovations
at about $112 billion, a figure that did not include
new construction.
‘Ignored by Many’
Instead of asking for more money, Ms. Filardo and the
other authors of the new report, “Growth and Disparity:
A Decade of Public School Construction, 1995-2004,”
are calling on the federal government to include facilities
accountability in federal education laws, including
the No Child Left Behind Act.
“[Facilities are] not on the radar of the U.S.
Department of Education,” Ms. Filardo said in
an interview. “In terms of a larger educational
context, this is an area that’s been ignored by
many.”
The possibility of including school facilities spending
requirements in federal law does not look promising,
according to Education Department officials.
“Federal funding is targeted toward children
in poverty and is meant to supplement, not supplant,
state and local spending,” said Chad Colby, a
spokesman for the department. “There are no plans
for us to get involved in school construction, as part
of the reauthorization [of No Child Left Behind] or
anything else.”
Thomas A. Kube, the executive director of the Scotsdale,
Ariz.-based Center for Educational Facility Planners
International, said his organization has been making
recommendations for some time for the federal government
to play a larger role in facilities spending. Despite
those efforts, he is not optimistic that the Bush administration
will change its stance in response to the new findings
about inequities in school facilities spending.
The report also makes other recommendations.
For instance, it calls for the National Center for
Education Statistics to expand its Common Core of Data
to include information on the condition and use of public
school buildings. As it is, the Common Core includes
statistics on a number of factors—such as number
of students by grade level, average daily attendance,
and school revenue by source—but does not collect
data on school facilities.
Mark S. Schneider, the NCES commissioner, said he could
not comment on the report because he served as a consultant
for the 21st Century School Fund—a nonprofit organization
that works to build and modernize urban school facilities—before
being named commissioner in November 2005. He said he
developed some data for the “Growth and Disparity”
report as part of his consultant work.
Mr. Schneider noted, however, that the NCES currently
has a fast-response school survey under review that
would involve school principals’ reporting on
the state of their facilities.
The data for the “Growth and Disparity”
report were analyzed by the Building Educational Success
Together, or BEST, partnership, created in 2001 with
support from the Ford Foundation. The partnership is
made up of eight national and local organizations: the
21st Century School Fund, the National Clearinghouse
for Educational Facilities, and the National Trust for
Historic Preservation, all based in Washington; the
Center for Cities and Schools at the University of California,
Berkeley; the Education Law Center, in Newark, N.J.;
the KnowledgeWorks Foundation, in Cincinnati; the Neighborhood
Capital Budget Group, in Chicago; and New Visions for
Public Schools, based in New York City.
BEST purchased data from McGraw-Hill Construction—a
provider of information on the construction industry
that is a division of the New York City-based McGraw-Hill
Cos.—and examined the scale, distribution, and
scope of school construction spending for 1995 to 2004
to compile its data. The Ford Foundation provided funding
for the research study.
Facilities Lawsuits
Schools’ construction budgets are generally determined
at the local level and are separate from their annual
operating budgets. States spend varying amounts on construction,
and in some cases don’t get involved at all.
However, the trend is toward states’
augmentation of local districts’ construction
funding, according to Molly A. Hunter, the managing
director of the National Access Network, an affiliate
of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, which is leading
school finance litigation in New York. The CFE is based
at Teachers College, Columbia University.
“It used to be totally a local thing,”
Ms. Hunter said. “Now, more and more states are
providing [facilities] funding, but it varies enormously.”
According to the National Access Network, 35
states have faced lawsuits involving school facilities
funding. The highly publicized case of Abbott v. Burke
in New Jersey was one of the first to link the state
of school facilities to inherent inequalities between
districts.
As a result of a 1985 state supreme court decision
in the case, the state was ordered to address facilities
deficiencies in 30 of its poorest districts. In 2000,
New Jersey allocated $8.6 billion for school construction.
Of that amount, $6 billion was earmarked for schools
deemed to have insufficient facilities in the Abbott
decision.
“Growth and Disparity” uses New Jersey
as an example of a state where lawsuits involving school
facilities funding have had a positive effect on the
state of school buildings. The report compares per-student
expenditures before and two years after successful school
finance court decisions. The researchers conclude that
the states with successful court cases spent on average
$158 more per student annually than states with unsuccessful
lawsuits or no facilities-related cases.
Despite the report’s findings, Ms. Filardo of
the 21st Century School Fund was quick to point out
that knowing how much was spent on construction, and
where the money went, is not enough to predict costs
in the future.
“We spent this much, but do we need to spend
the same amount going forward?” she said. “We
don’t know nationally how much of a dent was really
made. We know it was a lot more than people thought,
and it was not yet enough.”
Rising construction costs have resulted in larger-than-anticipated
construction costs for many districts. In Los Angeles,
for example, mounting construction costs paired with
less state aid than expected are pushing a large construction
and renovation project considerably above its nearly
$20 billion budget.
© 2006 Editorial Projects in Education |