Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Consequences of Rejecting of Federal Funding October 25, 2006 Presented by: Dr. Paul Johnson Dr. Robert Howell Glenn Gustafson.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Consequences of Rejecting of Federal Funding October 25, 2006 Presented by: Dr. Paul Johnson Dr. Robert Howell Glenn Gustafson."— Presentation transcript:

1 Consequences of Rejecting of Federal Funding October 25, 2006 Presented by: Dr. Paul Johnson Dr. Robert Howell Glenn Gustafson

2 D-11 Consolidated Grant  Mandated by CDE, submitted to the state electronically by the district upon Board review  Includes Title I, Title II, Title IID, Title III, Title IV, Title V and annually funds approximately $11 Million  Administered in D-11 by Office of Special Programs/Grants in the Division of Instruction (Dr. Paul Johnson)

3 D-11 Consolidated Grant  Title I – Disadvantaged Students-Reading and Math - $8.3 million  Title II – Class Size Reduction/teacher quality- $1.7Million  Title IID – Technology in Education - $85,200  Title III – English Language Learners - $148,000  Title III – English Language Set aside - $1,600  Title IV – Safe & Drug Free Schools - $152,000  Title V - Innovative Education Practices- $61,700

4 Consolidated Grant  Requirements from Federal and State: Single Assurance against discrimination Participation in CSAP and school improvement Nat’l Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Test Annual Financial Reports Single Audit Requirements Annual Program Evaluations

5 Consolidated Grant  Requirements we CANNOT Waive: Accreditation measures to close the achievement gap  Requires professional development, technical assistance and possible school closure School Accountability Report (SAR) CSAP Reporting (State Law) Individualized Learning Plans (ILP’s) for all students not proficient in Reading (CBLA)

6 Special Education - Title VIB  Developed for Local Education Agencies (LEA)  Administered in Special Education (Dr. Robert Howell)  FY 06-07 Budget = $5.5 million

7 Special Education - VIB  Although a Board of Education may choose to refuse federal funds, it is doubtful that any significant requirements of the district to serve Special Education or 504 students could be legally eliminated.

8 Conclusions  District 11 is an increasingly urban school district that receives millions of dollars based on our student mix. (13,000 students on Free/Reduced Lunch)  Other districts rejecting federal funding are NOT!  Title I provides over $8.2 million to fund 115 FTE (Teachers & Support Staff) 150 FTE in Cons. Grant  These federal resources are essential in helping the district achieve its goals of increasing student achievement in accordance with the District’s Strategic Plan.

9 Conclusions  Title I is the major site-based funding source for one-third of our schools, including 3 charter schools (22 total school sites)  Rejection of Federal funding would NOT reduce reporting & compliance significantly.  Approx. 1/3 rd of the mandate would shift to the accreditation process, without additional funding.


Download ppt "Consequences of Rejecting of Federal Funding October 25, 2006 Presented by: Dr. Paul Johnson Dr. Robert Howell Glenn Gustafson."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google