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Strengthening school governance 

At AEC, CSBA debuts legislative agenda and grassroots tools

Strengthening local school governance was the common thread that ran through the wide-ranging State of the State panel discussion that closed CSBA’s Annual Education Conference and Trade Show last month.

It’s also the goal behind the association’s legislative strategy for 2013 (see related story on page 2), as another panel will detail in the Forecast Webcast coming Jan. 17. Registration is open at www.csba.org/Events.aspx.

CSBA Executive Director Vernon M. Billy drove the point home in his closing remarks at State of the Sate, offering a heartfelt note of thanks to CSBA’s members for supporting the association’s initiatives and adding, “We are only as strong as you allow us to be. We are only as strong as you make us, and we need your participation in supporting the work of our advocates, whether it’s in Sacramento or whether it’s Washington D.C.”

CSBA Assistant Executive Director for Governmental Relations Dennis Meyers had just stressed the association’s growing emphasis on strengthening local school governance throughout California by equipping education advocates with the information and tools to build grassroots support. CSBA’s Stand Up For Education initiative, which was rolled out at AEC (see related story on page 7), is the newest tool for that effort, supporting existing grassroots strategies.

“The charge we have the next legislative session is to really build our capacity locally, so that school board members are driving that charge to convince the Legislature and governor that this is not only the right thing to do—it’s the only thing to do,” Meyers said.

In between Billy’s opening and Meyers’ conclusion, they and fellow panelists Ron Bennett, president of School Services of California, and Kevin Gordon, president of Capitol Advisors Group, LLC, stressed the need to build on the support for public education that voters demonstrated last November in passing Proposition 30 to protect schools from devastating midyear cuts.

“It didn’t get you any net new dollars,” Gordon reminded the audience about the measure, and he cautioned that it will raise the expectations of labor bargaining groups in upcoming contract negotiations.

Weighted student formula

The panel also discussed Gov. Jerry Brown’s plans to introduce a revised approach this year to restructure public education finance through a weighted student funding formula that would fundamentally alter how schools receive funds from the state. Meyers and Policy and Programs Senior Director Teri Burns represented CSBA in recent meetings with Brown administration officials and other stakeholders seeking to adjust the governor’s formula, which would begin with a uniform base allocation per pupil and then add “weights”—money—to account for the special challenges schools face in educating students such as English learners.

“If you talk about finance reform in California for schools, you have a large problem and you have a small problem. The small problem is addressed by the weighted student formula, and that is the distribution of the money,” School Services’ Bennett said.

State of the State video index

An archived video of the State of the State is available at aec.csba.org under the “Attendees” button through Jan. 30. Following CSBA President Cindy Marks’ introduction and a brief talk by National School Boards Association President C. Ed Massie, key issues and the times they were discussed include:

Vernon M. Billy’s introductory remarks: 7:28-9:05
Proposition 30: 9:06-23:24
Weighted student formula: 23:26-39:00
Supermajority: 39:03-50:11
Capital appreciation bonds: 50:15-55:38
Standards/assessment, finance/accountability: 55:43-59:55
Suspension/expulsion:  59:58-1:07:30
ESEA reauthorization: 1:07:32-1:14:58
Proposition 98 relevance: 1:15:00-1:29:05
Final remarks: 1:29:06-1:3 7:39