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Changes in Law 2022 – School Finance

School Finance

Unprecedented revenue growth drives historic Proposition 98 funding.

California tax revenue continued to grow at an extraordinary rate after the initial shock of the COVID-19 shutdowns. The “big three” taxes (personal income, corporations and sales) grew about 30% in 2020-21 and an additional 20% in 2021-22. General Fund revenues that count toward the calculation of the Prop. 98 Guarantee reached just over $220 billion in the 2022 Budget Act. That translated to historic growth in the Prop. 98 Guarantee, with expenditures for K-14 schools surpassing $110 billion. This level of funding is roughly $16.5 billion above the previous high mark for Prop. 98 in the 2021 Budget Act.

LCFF increase, COVID attendance relief and one-time funding among highlights of the Budget.

Once the final calculations were made in the K-12 budget clean-up bill, the total increase to the LCFF base grant amount over the level funded in the prior year was 13.26%, which includes a cost-of-living- adjustment (COLA) of 6.56% and an additional augmentation of 6.7%. The budget included both a three-year rolling average ADA option to help school districts with declining enrollment, and a current year ADA fix that protects LEAs from attendance disruptions caused by COVID and related issues. In addition, the budget included two large block grants of one-time funding, a nearly $8 billion Learning Recovery Block Grant and a roughly $3.5 billion Arts, Music, and Instructional Materials Discretionary Block Grant.

Revenue situation uncertain for next several years.

Economic conditions, including high inflation, rising interest rates, supply chain disruptions and asset volatility, combined with the impacts of the Russian war in Ukraine, are creating a great deal of uncertainty related to revenue collections for the next few years. While it is too early to make predictions about the next California budget, revenue collections are down over the last month of the prior fiscal year and the first couple months of the current fiscal year. It appears likely that General Fund revenues and the Prop. 98 Guarantee hit a high mark in the 2022 Budget Act that will be difficult to improve upon (or even match) in the near future. Local education agencies (LEAs) may want to focus on stabilizing and maintaining existing programs rather than growth and expansion.

Major TK-12 components of the 2022 Budget Act.

Some TK-12 highlights of the budget include:


The Governor signed the following school finance bills:

Attendance

Capitol Advisors Group has produced a set of comprehensive client briefs detailing new education laws that were passed by the Legislature and signed into law by Governor Newsom in 2022. Each brief is organized by subject area and includes an executive summary highlighting major changes we think you should know about. Bills signed by the Governor take effect on January 1, 2023, unless the bill specifically states otherwise.

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