by Connie Sadowski
After the state legislature failed in
two special sessions this summer
to pass school fi nance reform measures,
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) issued an
executive order in August requiring
every school district in the state to
spend at least 65 percent of its funds
directly on classroom instruction. Perry
said improving classroom performance
is too important to set aside until lawmakers
overcome their differences.
“While I hope to one day reach a legislative
consensus on school fi nance, we
can no longer delay taking action that
will benefit schoolchildren, parents,
and taxpayers,” Perry said in an August
22 news release. “They deserve better
than unfulfi lled promises and continued
delays. They deserve immediate
action.”
If each district complies with the
65 percent formula, classrooms across
the state could see $1.6 billion in additional
funding without a tax increase,
said Kathy Walt, the governor’s press
secretary. State Sen. Jeff Wentworth
(R-San Antonio) was one legislator
who welcomed the formula. During the
regular legislative session this spring,
he sponsored an amendment that would
have required the same thing, had it
succeeded.
Court-Ordered Reform
The state was directed to reform its education finance structure this February
by a district court decision fi nding the
current system unconstitutional because “school districts lack meaningful discretion
to set local tax rates and because
the cost of providing an adequate education
exceeds the funds available to
districts through current funding formulas,”
according to an analysis conducted
by the Texas House of Representatives
Research Organization.
U.S. District Judge John Dietz also
found the system for funding school
facilities violates constitutional standards
for equity between propertywealthy
and property-poor school districts.
The state appealed directly to the
Texas Supreme Court, which is expected
to issue a ruling sometime this year.
Group Effort
Not all of the state’s districts needed
to improve their classroom spending,
said Peggy Venable, director of the
Texas chapter of the watchdog group
Americans for Prosperity. “As reported
by the school districts themselves, 217
school districts currently spend 65 percent
or more on classroom instruction,
but we want to see the other 800-plus
independent school districts focus more
dollars on instruction,” she said.
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According to the order, “Texas public schools will be required to spend an increasingly greater share of funds on direct classroom instruction as defi ned by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) until the goal of 65 percent is reached.” The NCES has defi ned direct classroom instruction as “instructional expenditures for activities directly associated with the interaction between teachers and students” including teacher salaries and benefits, textbooks, and supplies, according to its Web site.
Perry has directed Texas Education
Agency Commissioner Shirley Neeley
to design and implement a new fi nancial
accountability and reporting system for
Texas schools. Neeley has assembled a
task force of 13 school superintendents
and two regional offi ce staff members,
and has invited representatives from
organizations she had not named at
press time as ad hoc members. The
task force’s purpose is to defi ne which
instructional costs are to be used when
determining whether Texas school districts
are spending 65 percent of their
operating costs on instruction.
“My executive order will give taxpayers
the accountability they deserve
because it opens every school district’s
financial books to public scrutiny,”
Perry said. “Taxpayers may fi nd they
have the best-run schools in the state
of Texas, or they may fi nd areas where
their schools should be getting more for
their money. With greater transparency
in our schools, parents will be empowered
to demand change if needed at the
local level.”

“Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R)
issued an executive order
in August requiring every
school district in the state to
spend at least 65 percent of
its funds directly on
classroom instruction.”
Increased Transparency
Not all educators across the state are so
sure the order is going to work. Lonnie
Hollingsworth Jr., director of legal services
and governmental relations for the
Texas Classroom Teachers Association
(TCTA), said he has misgivings about
the 65 percent rule.
“While we certainly agree in concept
with the notion of directing more dollars
to the classroom as in the 65 percent
requirement, we have found that similar
measures enacted in the past and
which we supported have been easily
thwarted by creative coding of administrative
functions at the local level,” he
explained.
Gayle Fallon, president of the Houston
Federation of Teachers (HFT), agreed
that district administrators can be creative
when coding expenditures, noting,“some items listed
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as classroom expenditures may not really be spent on actual classroom instruction.
“HFT no longer wants the districts to be able to transfer their bloated staff support services into hidden budget line items titled ‘central offi ce curriculum or staff development expenses’ that result in campuses carrying the burden of that expense,” Fallon said.
Greater Accountability
In addition to the 65 percent formula,
Perry’s executive order calls for other
sweeping reforms, such as greater
transparency in reporting of funds used
for non-instruction expenditures such as
counseling, technology, funds for maintenance
and construction, and dues for
clubs and organizations.
Also included is better transparency
in reporting funds for lobbying, consulting,
public relations service fees,
and legal fees—including fees spent on
lawsuits against the state—and clear,
concise reporting of money available
in school districts’ rainy day savings
accounts, Walt said.
Transparency in campus-level
spending and reporting is just what
Texas Eagle Forum President Cathie
Adams says her organization will work
toward.
“I am very pleased that Governor Perry
and his Commissioner of Education
fi rmly believe that more education dollars should be spent in the classroom,”
Adams said. “It is a travesty that hundreds
of thousands of dollars were previously
spent on nonacademic expenses
such as lobbyists and seminars, rather
than in our children’s classrooms.”
Connie Sadowski (connie@ceoaustin.org) is director of the Education Options
Resource Center at the Austin CEO
Foundation.
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