Newport-Mesa’s special education funding rising
Marisa O’Neil
State and federal funding has not kept pace with rising numbers of
special education students and the costs associated with caring for
them, a state consultant told school board officials Tuesday.
As a result, special education budgets eat into general education
money, explained Paul Goldfinger, vice president of the Sacramento
consulting firm School Services of California. Goldfinger spoke at a
special study session the Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board
of Trustees held to learn more about special education issues.
“The growth in percentage and growth in the high cost to educate
these pupils combine to make a statewide average of a 25% gap between
revenues and total costs,” Goldfinger said.
While federal funds for special education have remained constant,
state funding has dropped and costs have risen, Supt. Robert Barbot
said. In Newport-Mesa schools, he estimated the difference at about
$11 million a year, depending on the numbers and needs of the
students.
“We don’t want contention between special ed and general ed
parents or the district,” Barbot said after the meeting. “We’re
talking about kids, here. We have an obligation to do what we can to
help them live happy, productive lives.”
Examining teachers’ case loads, limiting the number of services
contracted to outside agencies and using interested parents to help
design programs can help keep costs down, Goldfinger suggested.
Parents in suburban, coastal areas tend to be educated and
informed about special education issues, and can help serve as
advocates, he said.
Evaluating students and placing them in “appropriate” programs,
even if parents would prefer for their children to be in other ones,
such as ones at private schools, can also cut down on costs,
Goldfinger said.
After the meeting, Gary Monahan, Costa Mesa’s mayor and chairman
of the district’s Special Education Community Advisory Committee,
said he disagreed with that assessment.
“The word ‘appropriate’ is subjective,” said Monahan, parent to an
autistic child. “It’s not that simple. What a parent thinks and what
the district thinks is appropriate may not be the same thing.”
Though much of the meeting addressed complicated budget issues, a
few parents showed up and stayed until the end. Board member Dana
Black said she encourages parents to learn about funding issues to
help them understand the big picture in the district.
“This clarified for me the budget constraints in the district,”
said Harbor Council PTA Special Education Liaison Kathy Koenig. “I
had no idea and I’m the mother of a special ed student who’s been
through the system.”
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