PRESS RELEASE
October 8, 2003
Charter Schools: Can They Survive in Utah?
Today at a luncheon sponsored by Beneficial Life, Wheeler Machinery
and KUER FM90, Utah Foundation released its September Research Report
on Charter School financing in Utah. 3,295 students are now enrolled
in charter schools in Utah, up from an enrollment of around 1,000 during
the last school year.
This report provides an in-depth analysis of the
funding for six of the eight original charter schools in Utah as well
as comparing that
funding to Utah’s traditional school districts. Once federal start-up
grants are excluded, as these cannot be used for ongoing expenditures,
total per-pupil funding at Utah’s charter schools is $4,822 compared
to an average of $5,609 for traditional district schools. The report,
entitled “Charter Schools: Can They Survive in Utah?” should
accompany this release, if not, it is available at http://www.utahfoundation.org/reports.html.
Speaking of the findings in this report, Senior Research
Analyst Janice Houston said, “We found many pressure points on
charter school finances, any one of which may cause a charter school
to close. Some
schools in Utah are facing a combination of these pressures and it seems
likely that they may be forced to shut their doors.”
Ms. Houston added, “The largest stressor seems to be charter schools’ inability
to borrow money either in the public or private sector to finance facility
construction. This inability to borrow is brought about because of charters’ uncertain
legal status-they are neither a truly public entity or a truly private
one and the risk to lenders that the schools may fail or the state of
Utah may abandon the experiment.”
Findings in this report include:
- Changes made to charter school financing during the 2003 legislative
session have created unanticipated market outcomes, meaning that charter
schools in high-property tax districts are underfunded relative to
surround district schools while those charter schools in low-property
tax districts
are overfunded relative to surround district schools. This may created
an unintended consequence of having charters saturate low property-tax
districts and neglect students in other areas.
- Districts experience a revenue loss of at least $2,874 when a student
in grades 1-12 leaves a traditional school for a charter school. However,
districts experience little cost savings as many of their operating
costs are “fixed”. For example, a whole classroom full
of students would need to leave for charter schools in order to eliminate
one teaching
position.
- Charters have several challenges to their viability in Utah. These
include the differentiated weighted pupil unit (WPU) that state funding
is calculated on; an uncertain legal status that does not allow charters
to access traditional forms of public or private finance for capital
projects; the loss of “angel” investors, those that provide
funds, facilities or the parents that donate time towards the success
of their students; and finally economies of scale. Utah’s education
system is not set up for small schools to be financially independent.
- The differentiated WPU is calculated under the assumption that
it costs more to educate high school students than elementary students.
While this may be true in other parts of the country, Utah has two
factors
that keep the costs of high school students low. One is the cultural
norm of allowing release time one period a day-this allows districts
to defray the costs of facilities and teachers were all students
on campus for all class periods. The second is the built-in mechanisms
within Utah’s
public school financing system that take into account the added burden
high schoolers place on funding.
Utah Foundation is a nonprofit, non-advocacy research organization.
Our mission is to encourage informed public policy making and to serve
as Utah's trusted source for independent, objective research on crucial
public policy issues.
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