Menu
2003 Session

Budget Amendments - HB1400 (Conference Report)

View Budget Item
View Budget Item amendments

Allow Dropout Prevention as Use of Block Grant (language only)

Item 147 #20c

Item 147 #20c

Education: Elementary and Secondary
Direct Aid To Public Education

Language
Page 158, strike lines 15 through 40, insert:
"a. From the amounts transferred to this Item from the Dropout Prevention program a total estimated at $10,093,313 in the second year shall be disbursed to school divisions in the same manner as it would have been paid to school divisions under the originating program. These payments to school divisions shall constitute the state's share of funding for a Student Achievement Grants program.
b. Funds received by school divisions shall be used at the discretion of the local school divisions for one or more of the following purposes:
1) reducing class sizes in grades kindergarten through three;
2) increasing services in the Early Reading Intervention program;
3) serving at-risk four-year-old students including those served by Title I programs;
4) providing additional remediation to students who have failed or who are at risk of failing the Standards of Learning tests; and
5) providing dropout prevention services.
c. In the event that salary increases authorized in Paragraph k 1) a of this item are not implemented due to the revenue reforecast required by Item 511 Paragraph Q,   $1,193,313 shall be transferred from the Student Achievement Grants program to the Standards of Quality accounts for Compensation Supplements created in this Item to address compensation-related concerns raised by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission's February 2002 Report,
Review of Elementary and Secondary School Funding
.  The transferred amounts shall be distributed in the same proportion as they would have been paid under the Student Achievement Grants program."
Page 158, strike lines 45 through 52.
Page 159, strike lines 1 and 2.
Page 159, line 3, strike "e." and insert "d."


Explanation
(This amendment includes dropout prevention services as one of the allowable uses of funding from the new Student Achievement Grants. The Student Achievement block grant, included as a policy change in the Governor's proposed budget, was composed of funds previously directed towards Dropout Prevention, School Health Incentive, and Technology Support. Under the block grant, it is at the discretion of the school division to use the funding for one or more of the following: K-3 Class Size Reduction, Early Reading Intervention, At-Risk Four-Year-Olds, SOL remediation, or Dropout Prevention. There is a companion amendment in Item 145. Language is added that specifies in the event that a second-year salary increase for teachers is not provided, then $8.0 million ($1.2 million of this funding and $6.8 million from the second-year salary increase) of the funding would be transferred to Basic Aid for compensation-related concerns raised by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission's February 2002 Report, Review of Elementary and Secondary School Funding. However, in this event, each school division will receive the same amount of funding as it would have under the block grant or the underlying programs' original distribution.)