Study: Special-education costs high
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The Newport-Mesa Unified School District paid nearly double the
average state percentage for its special-education programs last
year, according to a report issued by School Services of California.
At the district’s board meeting Tuesday, school services vice
president Paul Goldfinger and educational consultant Sharon Popp
presented the results of a two-month study they conducted of
Newport-Mesa’s special-education programs. In April, district
officials had contacted a group in Sacramento help determine how to
lower special-education costs in the coming years.
Among the report’s findings were that Newport-Mesa’s percentage of
students in special education was slightly higher than the state
average in 2003-04, that its percentage of autistic students was more
than double the state’s, and that the district footed nearly 50% of
its special-education costs -- compared with the average California
district, which paid around 25%.
The purpose of the report was to recommend cost-cutting measures
for the district, rather than to analyze the numbers. However,
Goldfinger and Supt. Robert Barbot attributed Newport-Mesa’s high
special-education costs to legal action by parents and to the high
number of families who move to the area to raise their children.
“Number one, we have parents who pay close attention specifically
to their kids,” Barbot said. “Number two, we have a good reputation
in the state, so families with students with particular needs are,
perhaps, more particular about where their kids go to school. And
number three, in the area of autism, which is where our biggest
growth is, there’s a high percentage [of children diagnosed] in
professional families.”
The 27-page report praised Newport-Mesa for a number of the
measures it has taken on behalf of special education in recent years.
Since last fall, the district has created an autism-specialist
position and has hired more speech and occupational therapists. In
addition, special education co-directors Patrick Ryan and Denise
Knudsen have implemented a software program to keep track of student
records.
“The district is aiming to expand its own expertise instead of
relying on contracted services,” Goldfinger told the board Tuesday.
He and Popp also pointed out areas for improvement, citing
Newport-Mesa’s high number of special-education students as the
result of a lack of early interventions. By addressing children’s
problems at a young age, the report argued, the district can lower
the number of students who will eventually require special-education
services.
Children become eligible for special services after going through
student study teams in which teachers and administrators evaluate the
difficulties students are having in class. Goldfinger and Popp,
however, urged Newport-Mesa to adopt a districtwide model for study
teams to ensure consistency, and to keep statistics on the number of
students who are evaluated by the teams but do not move on to
special-education programs.
“People perceive the [study teams] as a fast track to special
education, and we want to make sure we’re not placing kids in special
education who don’t really deserve to be there,” Popp said.
The report suggested that Newport-Mesa provide more
special-education training to general-education teachers and
administrators, and that the district initiate a public-relations
campaign to better trumpet its programs. Although Newport-Mesa has a
below-average number of students enrolled in private schools, it has
89 students attending class -- under Newport-Mesa tuition -- at the
county office or in other districts.
A constant problem for Newport-Mesa in recent years has been
parent litigation, which often leads the district to transfer
students elsewhere while still paying their education costs.
According to Mark Hargon, the office manager of the state Special
Education Hearing Office, Newport-Mesa had 41 due process hearing
requests at the end of the third fiscal quarter this year, tying with
the San Francisco Unified School District for the third-most in the
state.
To keep more families in the district, Newport-Mesa is seeking to
expand its programs and staff. The district’s tentative 2005-06
budget allots $24.97 million for special education, a nearly
$2-million increase from the current year.
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