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February 9, 2000
Federal Attempts to Give States More Flexibility in Administering Programs Fall Short New federal initiatives to give states and local districts more flexibility in dealing with federal education program requirements fall short because they don’t include the programs judged most critical by school officials, such as special education, according to a new U.S. General Accounting Office report. GAO investigators interviewed officials from 87 school districts, primarily in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Louisiana, as well as representatives from 15 major education associations, to attempt to measure the effects of recent federal flexibility initiatives. Investigators also concluded:
"The report accurately reflects
the sentiments I hear from administrators—the intent of federal programs
is often good, the implementation strategies to achieve the intent is
often too prescriptive, and there is never enough money to cover the full
cost of delivery," said Stinson Stroup, executive director of the
Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators.
Under the Education Flexibility (Ed-Flex) Act passed last year with the support of AASA, state and local districts can be granted greater flexibility in using federal education funds to support locally designed school improvement efforts, in exchange for increased accountability for results. States and districts can seek waivers in requirements of certain programs, including Title I, Eisenhower Professional Development, and Safe and Drug-Free Schools. Many schools seek waivers to combine funds from the programs for one larger project or to address a critical need area. The law, however, makes clear that some requirements may not be waived, specifically those that apply to health, safety and civil rights. And the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)—the most expensive federal education law to implement—is not covered by Ed-Flex. "The problem as a local superintendent—and I know most others will agree—is that there are so many regulations that tie our hands so much on how to use dollars," said Brock Butts, superintendent of the Tremont Community School District Unit 702 in Illinois. "The dollars generally could serve us better in a different area, especially IDEA. That is such a big expenditure and a regulatory nightmare. Our own staff is so overwhelmed with paperwork, it’s taking time away from our first priority—the kids." For several major programs—most notably IDEA—federal financial contributions do not fully fund the activities these programs support, the report noted. Currently the federal government provides only about 12 percent funding for IDEA; federal law allows it to contribute 40 percent. And while Ed-Flex allows districts
to shift a portion of their funds across certain federal programs, many
states do not allow districts to use this provision, said the report, "Elementary and Secondary
Education: Flexibility Initiatives Do Not Address Districts’ Key Concerns
About Federal Requirements."
"When a state requirement arises from the implementation of a federal law or regulation, it becomes especially hard to distinguish a state requirement from a federal one," the report said. "Officials from most of the school districts we visited told us that they could not tell or did not know which requirements were state and which were federal." Bruce Hunter, AASA’s director of public policy, said varying federal and state provisions often put local administrators in a Catch-22 situation. "We would like more money for IDEA, but we do not want to do anything with the structure that would make the program more incompatible with state law." AASA has urged Congress to require states to implement federal laws and regulations, not state variations of the federal law. The report also found that despite a "compelling need," state and local school district officials often have incomplete information about federal requirements and the flexibility available in implementing them. "Unfortunately, the generalist working with all school programs doesn’t always know all the options and therefore doesn’t take advantage of them when they are available," Stroup concurred. The report concluded:
Hunter said the interest in the
success of the flexibility initiatives can be traced to the so-called
"Straight A’s Act" passed by the U.S. House last fall. Under the original
H.R. 2300, almost all formula grant funds—particularly Title 1—would have
been directed into state coffers as a block grant to be used however
individual states wished. Facing stiff opposition from public education
supporters, including AASA, the bill was scaled back to a limited pilot
project after some lawmakers objected that federal help could be diverted
from disadvantaged students. The Senate has yet to take up the Straight A’s Act. Natalie Carter Holmes, Editor |
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