NEWS ANALYSIS by NEIL SULLIVAN
In a recent guest editorial to the AJC “Get Schooled” Blog, Georgia Budget and Policy Institute (GPBI) Director Stephen J. Owens advocates for “equitable funding” in education.
He cites an example where “Clayton County schools received $1,245 less per student in state and local funding than neighboring Fayette County, due to the uniquely American policy of tying school funding to local property values.”
Mr. Owens omits that when federal funds are counted, that Clayton received $560 more per student than Fayette in total educational funding.
For comparison in FY 2023 total educational funding, Clayton schools received over $714 million while Fayette received just over $260 million. When you consider student FTE population, Fayette has just over 20,000 students, versus Clayton at over 52,000.
However, expenditure per student FTE in both systems are near the average system in Georgia of $13,189, with Fayette slightly lower and Clayton slightly higher.
Looking as far back as 2019, Clayton’s investment in expenditure per pupil has materially lagged the state average until FY 2023.
Clayton’s collection from federal sources more than doubled per student since 2021 from $718/per FTE in 2020 to $1,785 in 2021, now totaling over $120 million dollars in just FY 2023.
Meanwhile slightly more than half of Fayette’s funding comes from the county’s citizens, with a millage rate near the maximum allowed.
In 2023 Clayton property owners funded 31.3% of its school’s operations. In these inflationary times, rising costs are eating away at Fayette’s ability to maintain smaller class size in neighborhood schools.
Worse, Mr. Owens neglects to mention that the state’s QBE funding formula subtracts the equivalent of 5 mills from the earned state funding as the “fair share” of local funding. Fayette County has lost over $95 million over the past 5 years.
However, the state…
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