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2024 Session

Budget Amendments - HB30 (Conference Report)

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Direct Aid - At Risk Add On Program Revisions

Item 125 #2c

Item 125 #2c

First Year - FY2025 Second Year - FY2026
Education: Elementary and Secondary
Direct Aid to Public Education FY2025 $186,666,764 FY2026 $184,600,875 GF

Language
Page 143, line 52, strike "$10,290,021,574" and insert "$10,476,688,338".
Page 143, line 52, strike "$10,073,997,964" and insert "$10,258,598,839".

Page 153, strike lines 5 through 8.

Page 154, line 29, strike "Prevention,".

Page 154, line 30, strike "Intervention, and Remediation, (ii)".

Page 154, line 30, strike "(iii)" and insert "(ii)".

Page 158, strike lines 15 through 53.

Page 159, strike lines 1 through 12, and insert:

"9. At Risk Add-On

a. Out of this appropriation, $616,043,355 the first year and $648,055,870 the second year from the general fund and $225,172,109 the first year and $192,377,320 the second year from the Lottery Proceeds Fund is provided to distribute the state share of funds for the At-Risk Program.  These payments shall be distributed based on the estimated number of At-Risk students, based on (1) the most recent three-year average Identified Student Percentage, applying a 1.25 multiplier factor , and (2) including one quarter of students identified as English language learners.

b. The At-Risk Program shall provide each school division the state share of an 11.0 percent basic-aid add-on per estimated At-Risk student.  In addition, the program shall provide each school division the state share of a payment equal to a 0.0 to 37.0 percent basic-aid add-on per estimated At-Risk student, with each school division's add-on percentage determined based upon the school division's concentration of At-Risk students relative to all other school divisions.  Funding shall be matched by the local government based on the composite index of local ability-to-pay.

c. These funds may be used for the purposes established in general law, including supporting programs and services for students who are educationally at risk, including prevention, intervention, or remediation activities required pursuant to Standard 1 (§ 22.1-253.13:1); teacher recruitment programs and incentives; targeted compensation adjustments to assist in recruiting and retaining experienced teachers in high poverty schools; Dropout Prevention; community and school-based truancy officer programs; Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID); Project Discovery; programs for English language learners; the hiring of additional school counselors, testing coordinators, and licensed behavior analysts; programs relating to increasing the success of disadvantaged students in completing a high school degree and providing opportunities to encourage further education and training; and programs designed to reduce chronic absenteeism."

Page 159, line 13, strike "4)" and insert "d."

Page 159, line 34, strike "f." and insert "10."

Page 160, line 31, strike "g." and insert "11."

Page 172, line 35, strike "Prevention, Intervention, and Remediation".



Explanation

(This amendment provides $186.7 million the first year and $184.6 million the second year from the general fund to (i) consolidate SOQ Prevention, Intervention, and Remediation and At-Risk Add-On incentive funding into a single At-Risk Add-On funding program, (ii) transition the proxy used to estimate the number of at-risk students from federal free lunch rates to federal Identified Student Percentage rates, using a multiplier of 1.25 plus one-quarter of English learner students, (iii) distributes an 11.0 percent add on to basic aid funding per at-risk student, and (iv) distributes a variable add on between 0 percent and 37 percent to basic aid funding per At-Risk student based on the concentration of At-Risk students in the school division relative to all other school divisions. This amendment addresses in part recommendations 8, 9, and 10 from JLARC's 2023 report, "Virginia's K-12 Funding Formula.")