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Hoffman: Arizona 'Has Broken Promise' To Schools Hurting During COVID-19 Pandemic

Kathy Hoffman
Arizona Department of Education
Kathy Hoffman in June 2019.

A promise by Gov. Doug Ducey to protect state aid for schools during the pandemic is coming up short.

In some cases, a lot short.

Ducey announced in June he was setting aside $370 million in federal cash to cushion schools against budget shortfalls due to anticipated enrollment declines. 

"This will ensure budget stability, even with more students participating in distance learning, and provide dollars when students are learning in the traditional classroom setting,'' the governor said in a press release of his program. Ducey said he recognized "the additional costs in-person learning will bring to districts this school year.''

In essence, Ducey said his plan would guarantee that schools will have at least 98% of the state aid they were getting this past school year.

That is crucial for schools as the cash they get from the state is based on the number of students in attendance. And even with schools being allowed to count children who are in online-only learning situations, the number is off — sharply.

Last year, the regular "average daily membership'' count was 1,117,521.

This year, on Nov. 3, a benchmark for determining aid, the count was down by 3.7%

Only thing is, the requests for cash from what was dubbed the Enrollment Stability Grant program exceeded the $370 million available. And so when the grants actually were made this past week, it left a lot of districts in the lurch.

In Tucson Unified School District, for example, officials figured they were due about $20.5 million. What they got was less than $15.3 million.

At the nearby Amphitheater district, a $5.6 million allocation fell short of the $10 million expected.

In the Phoenix Valley, Mesa Public Schools, the state's largest school district, was not left unscathed. The district's enrollment has fallen by about 5.6% compared to last year primarily in the elementary level since some families have opted to skip kindergarten this school year, said Superintendent Andi Fourlis. The Mesa district had hoped to receive $28 million to cover its losses, but instead it got close to $23 million. 

Chandler Unified School District wasn't hit as hard, getting about $14.3 million out of the nearly $15.6 million it expected.

But even smaller districts got hit, like the Casa Grande Elementary School District, which found itself more than a half million dollars in the hole.

"This hurt us,'' said Joetta Gonzales, the district superintendent. "Like many other surrounding districts, we have experience a substantive decline in enrollment this year.''

Daniel Scarpinato, the governor's chief of staff, does not dispute that schools are getting less than what they thought they would be receiving. But he said, in effect, that the schools should be pleased they're getting anything at all, as governors in other states have not agreed to any supplemental funding and, in some cases, have cut K-12 dollars in the wake of the pandemic.

Scarpinato said the bottom line is that schools are getting less state aid because they just don't have the same number of children they did before the virus. He said there are multiple reasons, suggesting some of these are the fault of districts themselves and the choices they make.

"One of them is students transferring to schools that are offering in-person learning,'' Scarpinato said. He also said there are "massive amounts of digital truancy'' where students are enrolled in online learning but not logging in and therefore not being counted for attendance.

But Kathy Hoffman, the state superintendent of public instruction, said she believes schools are being shortchanged.

"The ESG program was intended to provide much-needed budget stability for schools as they planned for this tumultuous year,'' she said.

More to the point, Hoffman said schools made plans based on the promised dollars to fund everything from COVID-19 mitigation strategies — think masks, plastic shields and handwashing stations — to setting up distance learning programs. And she said they were counting on those dollars.

"Based on the allocations provided to schools last week, the state has broken that promise,'' Hoffman said.

Scarpinato said he doesn't see it that way.

He said Arizona schools actually got $716 million from the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act.

But Ducey had nothing to do with $346 million of that, with schools getting their own allocation. Scarpinato said it was the governor's decision to use some of his own allocation to add to what they were getting.

"Frankly, I don't believe many, if any states, have done anything like this to provide additional CARES dollars beyond what the federal government specifically earmarked for K-12 education.

Ducey actually has more federal cash at his disposal.

In fact, of the nearly $1.9 billion appropriation that was given directly to the governor, he sent $400 million to state agencies for their own operations, including salaries. They then used the federal infusion to give some of their budgeted dollars back to the state.

Scarpinato is unapologetic about using those CARES funds for basic state government operations instead of issues directly related to the pandemic.

"It's really important for the education community and for public schools that we have budget stability,'' he said.

Without that, Scarpinato said, Arizona would be in the same position as other states whose economies have been buffeted by the COVID-19 outbreak where budgets have had to be cut, including to education.

Anyway, he said, that $370 million is more than the districts would have gotten following the basic state aid formula which is tied to attendance.
But the shortage of funds is only part of the issue.

The additional aid was designed to go out on a per-student basis. Put simply, the amount of aid to get them back to that 98% level was linked to how many students they were short.

But the governor's office decided to impose a cap of $500 per student. So the districts with the biggest losses are not only not getting nowhere close to the 98%, they are getting an even smaller share than some other districts where the attendance losses have not been as great.

One of the districts that affected was Amphitheater. And Scott Little, the district's chief financial officer, said that makes no sense, given that the whole purpose of the dollars was to provide help based on financial need.

"It's like arriving at the scene of an accident and killing the most injured patient,'' he said.

Scarpinato said that $500 cap was based on guidance from the U.S. Department of Treasury.

He did not dispute Little's contention that the state could waive that as long as it did some additional auditing. But Scarpinato said it would have created an "administrative nightmare.''

Anyway, he said, it's not like the state kept the extra amounts. Scarpinato said those dollars were divided up among other districts. He said if schools are dissatisfied, there is an option.

"The best place for this discussion is in the Legislature,'' Scarpinato said.

Rocio Hernandez was a senior field correspondent at KJZZ from 2020 to 2022.