Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 36

School finance primer Continued from page 10 It is important to establish LCAP goals that are measurable and achievable for all students and required subgroups. LCAP goals may be measured qualitatively or quantitatively. Carefully consider the number of LCAP goals that your LEA identifies, how they will be measured, and whether or not they will show an increase in student achievement and/or services both annually and at the end of the three-year LCAP. School districts receiving supplemental and concentration grant funds must create additional LCAP goals for the three target student groups: English learners, and low income and foster youth. These goals must be measured annually in order to prove that the required minimum proportionality percentage demonstrates how services provided in the LCAP for these pupils increased or improved services in proportion to the increase in funding provided. Interestingly, the SBE has recently established a Plan Alignment Committee that will spend the next few years analyzing all of the various plans school districts are required to create and determine if it is feasible to align them to one another. School districts are familiar with establishing a wide variety of California Department of Education and U.S. Department of Education plans that are tied to either specific funding sources or programs, such as a district strategic plan, LEA plan, English language learner plan, Single Plan for Student Achievement, Technology Integration Plan, and District Long Range Master Facilities Plan. Governing boards were expected to adopt a three-year LCAP spanning from fall 2014 to June 2017 by July 1, 2014. A school district’s 2014-15 budget had to be adopted at the same board meeting that the 2014-17 LCAP plan is adopted. The SBE presented a revised and renumbered LCAP and Annual Update template for public comment at its July 10 meeting. The revision encompasses more detailed reporting regarding budgeted and actual expenditures for actions and services noted in the original LCAP. LCAP county superintendent oversight Just as the county offices of education and California Department of Education have fiduciary oversight of LEA budgets under the Assembly Bill 1200 process, they will also now have regulatory authority regarding the LCAPs. The county superintendent of schools is responsible for oversight and approval of district LCAPs. The governing board of a school district must file the LCAP or annual update with the county superintendent of schools no later than five days after adoption. The three criteria that will be reviewed to determine if an LCAP is eligible for approval are: • LCAP adheres to the SBE-approved template. • Budget includes expenditures sufficient to implement the actions and strategies in the LCAP. • LCAP adheres to expenditure requirements pursuant to the Ed Code – funds apportioned for unduplicated pupils. CDE and SBE reminded school districts and COEs to pay special attention to the eight LCAP state priority areas and the metrics linked to these areas. Upon adoption of the rubric, the COE can approve an LCAP or it can: identify strengths and weaknesses of the LCAP, assign an academic expert/team, or request that the state superintendent of public instruction assign the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence to provide assistance. The state superintendent of public instruction may intervene if an LCAP fails to improve outcomes at an LEA for three or more subgroups for three out of four consecutive years. If the latter occurs, the SPI may appoint an academic trustee, stay and rescind board action, impose budget revisions or make changes to the LCAP. n Gina Potter is assistant superintendent, business services, Lemon Grove School District and president of ACSA’s Business Services Council. 36 36 Leadership