March 2004 |
School Budgets |
From the NYS Assembly • Sheldon Silver, Speaker Herman D. Farrell Jr., Alexander B. Grannis, RoAnn Destito, Susan John, Members, Joint Legislative Conference Committee on Budget Reform Steve Sanders • Chair, Education Committee |
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Assembly’s “Step Ahead” School Budgeting Plan Would End School Aid Uncertainty Annual guessing game replaced with a reliable year-in-advance formula The Assembly proposes a common sense solution to provide schools with the resources they need to plan ahead for the first time. School officials across New York have voiced concern over the annual budget uncertainty. It’s often a guessing game for school boards if their state aid amounts will increase or decrease from one year to the next. Complicating matters is the fact that local schools often have to prepare their budgets – and submit them for voter approval – well before state education aid numbers are finalized. To remedy this situation, the Assembly has proposed setting up a two-year school aid formula to give schools the information they need to plan timely budgets and prepare programs that meet high standards (A.9711). The Assembly plan, which was first introduced in 2001, helps remove the annual fiscal uncertainty and guards against unnecessary education cuts that could force school districts to raise taxes. In the first year of the Assembly’s "Step Ahead" school budgeting plan, the Legislature would adopt an education budget for the next two fiscal years. Thereafter, the Legislature would adopt the education budget for the following fiscal year. That way, school districts will know how much state aid they’re getting a full year in advance. Assembly pushes budget reforms and investments in education The Assembly doesn’t just focus on reforming the education formula. The Assembly continues to fight for real investments in New York’s education system. While the governor proposes $369 million in education cuts, the Assembly is fighting for a spending plan that invests – not undermines – state support for local schools. In fact, New York schools would have $3.8 billion less if the Assembly had gone along with the governor’s previous budget proposals. The governor’s latest school aid cuts would force school boards to choose between cutting programs and raising property taxes to make ends meet. The Assembly also recently unveiled a comprehensive reform plan to make the state’s budget process more open, accountable and efficient. The budget reform plan overhauls how the budget is negotiated and enhances accountability by making more expenditures subject to checks and balances. The Assembly firmly believes that meaningful reforms – whether it’s bringing greater public scrutiny to state spending or creating a new education aid formula – will improve New York’s ability to deliver efficient, cost-effective services to working families and taxpayers. |
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