M E M O R A N D U M
TO: Duval County School Board
Executive Staff
Principals
SAC Chairs
PTSA Chairs
Duval Teachers United
FROM:
Ed Pratt-Dannals ![]()
Superintendent of Schools
SUBJECT: CENSUS BUREAU STUDY ON FUNDING FOR EDUCATION
DATE: May 13, 2008
In April 2008, The U.S. Census Bureau released a report on public education K-12 funding by states for the 2005-06 school year. This was an excellent year for funding increases in Florida with an 8% overall increase. Not surprisingly, Florida came in 37th place in per pupil funding among the 50 states.
However, what was new information was the analysis of overall funding for education counting federal, state, and local sources of revenue adjusted according to income. Florida was in last place among the 50 states with only The District of Columbia providing lower funding. This is significant in that this statistic gives a more equitable basis of comparing funding on an “ability to pay.” Also disturbing was how Florida compared in funding K-12 education with other southern states that are typically “low tax” states:
Per $1,000 of Income
West Virginia 54.56
Arkansas 50.10
Louisiana 48.77
Georgia 48.21
Mississippi 48.18
South Carolina 47.07
Texas 44.26
Alabama 42.75
Virginia 39.23
North Carolina 38.42
Tennessee 35.55
Florida 33.51
Page 2
Census Bureau Study
May 13, 2008
As the knowledge and skills necessary to compete in a global economy increase, we need to better prepare all of our students for their futures. A key element in our success is attracting and retaining high quality teachers and principals. To do this, we have to be competitive with salary and benefits. Georgia is currently paying an average of $5,000 more per teacher, and districts like Fort Worth have teacher recruitment billboards up in our city. As a profession nationally, teachers are making 10% less than their equally prepared peers, even after adjusting for the shorter work period, benefits, and retirement. As Mishel, Allegretto, and Corcoran state in their book, The Teaching Penalty: Teacher Pay Losing Ground (2008), “If we deliberately set out to design a plan to discourage the best-qualified people from becoming teachers and to drive away the most experienced teachers, the pay penalty teachers now face would be the perfect way to do it.”
Florida must change this embarrassing situation through a multi-faceted state-wide effort to secure adequate, dependable revenue to support basic services such as K-12 education. To do less would be a travesty for our children and ultimately for our community.
EPD:dm
c: The Alliance for World Class Education
Chamber of Commerce
NAACP, Jacksonville Branch
Community Foundation
United Way of Northeast Florida
University of North Florida
Edward Waters College
Florida Community College at Jacksonville
Jacksonville University