As area rural school districts shrink and costs rise, new state report explores solutions
By
Scott O’Connell
Telegram & Gazette Staff
Posted Mar 3, 2018 at 8:18 PM
A new report from the state’s education
department calls the problems facing rural school districts “unique
challenges.” Some officials in those small, shrinking systems,
meanwhile, see it more as a struggle for survival.
Here
in Central Massachusetts, rural districts are struggling with declining
enrollments and rising operating costs. If things don’t improve, some
school officials said further staff and programming cuts, increased
class sizes and even school closures are possible consequences.
Despite
those troubles, Tari Thomas, superintendent of the Ralph C. Mahar
regional schools, said she is “feeling very optimistic” about the state
recognizing and responding to rural schools’ plight. Two years ago,
rural district leaders formed a coalition to advocate for their shared
needs, and the recent release of the “Fiscal Conditions in Rural School
Districts” report, which recommends relief measures such as increased
funding for rural schools, will focus even more attention on their
issues, they hope.
“We have reviewed the
report and are pleased to see that the Department of Education
recognizes and thoroughly understands the trends and issues in the rural
communities of the commonwealth,” said Deborah Boyd, associate
superintendent at the Tantasqua schools, one of four Central
Massachusetts systems featured in the report along with Ralph C. Mahar,
Quabbin and Berlin-Boylston.
According to
the report, rural districts are those with fewer than 21 students per
square mile.
Fifty-four school systems in Massachusetts fit that
description, but their combined student enrollment is just 2.9 percent
of the state total.
In the region, however,
there are districts not classified as “rural” in the report that are
still struggling with the same issues. Quaboag Regional, for instance,
which comprises West Brookfield and Warren, has been dealing with
declining enrollments, rising operating costs and other factors outlined
in the state’s study, to the point that closing West Brookfield’s
elementary school has become a possibility.
“We
cut every single year,” said the system’s superintendent, Brett
Kustigian. “We’re at the point where, when you cut so many positions,
there’s nothing left to cut.”
Rural school
officials placed some of the blame on the state’s outdated school
funding formula, which is now more than two decades old and they say no
longer reflects the true cost of educating students today. The formula’s
inadequacies are particularly hard on rural districts, which are on the
whole losing students and thus receiving comparatively smaller
foundation budgets in the state’s funding calculations, which are based
on annual student enrollment trends.
According
to the state’s report, the combined enrollments at rural schools
declined 14 percent between 2008 and 2017, while the rest of the state’s
enrollments fell just 2.7 percent. In the region, Quabbin in particular
has seen its student population decline by 29 percent since 2008.
Yet rural school officials are dealing with
the same overwhelming health care and special education cost increases
their colleagues in nonrural districts are seeing, and on top of that
trying to keep up with rising transportation costs that are unique to
their spread-out systems.
“Because we’re
rural, kids that need very specific kinds of programming we can’t offer
have to go a significant distance” to get it in another district, Ms.
Thomas said, adding the cost of that long-distance transportation “is
increasing at a rate I can’t keep up with.”
Maureen Marshall, Quabbin’s superintendent, said the state has undercompensated rural systems for that cost burden.
“Reconsidering
a higher and consistent rate of reimbursement for the total cost of
student transportation for regional schools would go a very long way in
addressing some of the financial concerns identified” in the state’s
report, she said, noting State Auditor Suzanne Bump came to a similar
conclusion in her department’s study of regional school systems last
fall.
The state’s latest report, too, poses
a change to the transportation reimbursement formula as a possible
solution to rural schools’ financial problems. It also suggests
overhauling the state’s school funding formula, as recommended by the
state’s Foundation Budget Review Commission in 2015, and creating a new
funding category called “sparsity aid” to further supplement rural
districts with declining student enrollments.
That
last idea is something other states have done, Ms. Thomas pointed out,
in recognition of the inherent limitations of schools in rural,
low-income areas. “You just can’t create the same economies of scale” in
those small districts, she said, which consequently need extra funding
from the state to maintain an equitable balance with larger and/or
wealthier systems.
The latest report also
presents further consolidation of services – either through full or
partial regionalization, superintendency unions or education
collaboratives – as a way for rural schools to scale up their resources.
Some school officials said it’s not always such an easy call to put
slightly better financial security over local identity, however.
In many sparsely populated, rural areas, “your
school is the community center for the town,” Ms. Thomas said. “It’s
where you get to know your neighbor, where you make friends – you don’t
want to lose that (to regionalization).”
“Urging the expansion of regions may indeed
create more cost-effective management models,” Ms. Marshall said.
“However, political resistance and the lack of state incentives for such
efforts are often serious deterrents to the realization of such
efforts.”
The state’s report suggests some
ways to make regionalization more enticing, however, by building on the
state’s existing competitive grant program for regionalizing government
entities; revamping the state’s bonus aid to newly formed regional
districts; and providing more data tools to guide districts looking for
regionalization or collaborative opportunities.
Another
program the report touches on and that several local rural systems are
benefiting from is school choice, which allows students to attend a
district outside of their hometown. School systems have the option to
accept students through school choice but not to prevent them from
leaving, and can either receive or lose state funding depending on
whether a school choice student is coming or going.
“The
lifeline has been school choice,” said Mr. Kustigian, who reported his
district brings in $1 million annually through the program. “It’s really
kept our enrollment up – it’s helped tremendously.”
Yet there is also criticism of the program for the way it pits needy districts against each other.
“I’m
robbing from my neighbors, and that’s never a good thing,” Ms. Thomas
said of school choice, which has brought in more than half of the
students attending Petersham, the highest percentage for any rural
district in the state. Without the program, however, Petersham wouldn’t
have enough students to support individual grades anymore, she said –
“they’ve have to go to combination classrooms.”
Rural school officials, consequently, are
hoping for more comprehensive changes at the state level to address
their systems’ problems.
“It is certainly
understandable that at the state level many issues are vying for a piece
of the same pot of money,” Ms. Boyd said, although she hoped for at
least more reliable regional transportation and special education
reimbursements. “For the foreseeable future, rural districts will likely
have to prioritize their requests and continue to work with our
neighbors to find areas to collaborate and share resources.”
State
Rep. Todd M. Smola, a Republican from Warren who also represents
Brimfield, Holland, Palmer, Sturbridge, Wales and Ware, admitted
“everybody’s looking for money” on Beacon Hill.
“The
question becomes, how do you get additional funding to the communities
that are struggling?” he said. “There’s only so much pie.”
The
recommendations in the state’s new rural schools report almost all
would require more funding to be set aside for rural districts, yet
urban and suburban communities are pushing the Legislature for more
funding for their schools as well.
But Mr.
Smola said the state’s rural caucus is training its focus on the school
funding issue and is exploring possible proposals like a “rural funding
assistance” program, potentially in next year’s budget.
“How
that would be broken down is obviously going to be the challenge,” he
said, explaining the state’s rural areas contain a variety of different
public school programs with varying degrees of need. “I’d like to think
we could give it a shot.”
The rural schools report doesn’t seem destined
to fade away any time, either. On March 12, acting state education
commissioner Jeffrey Wulfson will join state lawmakers and school
officials in Shelburne Falls for a public forum on the issue of rural
districts’ fiscal challenges.
Scott O’Connell can be reached at Scott.O’Connell@telegram.com. Follow him on Twitter @ScottOConnellTG
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