Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 9

nomic impact aid, routine restricted maintenance, physical education, and more. By comparison, the LCFF provides a base grant of funding for students per grade span: TK-3, 4-6, 7-8 and 9-12. Also, supplemental and concentration grant funds are provided to support the targeted populations of atrisk students (English learners, low income and foster youth). The LCFF also changed the former K-third grade class size reduction program to a K-third grade span adjustment (GSA) program that requires a phased in class size ratio of 24:1 by 2020-21. The former categorically funded programs for transportation and targeted instructional improvement grant remain embedded within the LCFF formula but are now called LCFF add-ons. Although the first implementation year of the LCFF began in July 2013, the LCFF formula was not released by the state until January 2014. nance’s projections, which indicate the state will be fully recovered from the recession by 2020-21. 2. Proposition 30 temporary education taxes are set to expire in 2016 (the sales tax portion) and 2018 (the income tax portion). The state has not yet indicated how it will address this school finance funding cliff when it occurs. 3. By 2020-21, when the state fully funds the LCFF, it will have restored education funding to the 2007-08 levels. Thus, California will continue to have an education funding adequacy problem by 2021 because we T he LCAP template establishes three state categories: conditions of learning, pupil outcomes and engagement. The following eight state LCAP key components are clustered within each of the three LCAP state categories: 1. Conditions of learning: • Basic services (highly qualified teachers, instructional materials aligned with standards, safe facilities) – priority 1 • Implementation of state standards – priority 2 • Course access – priority 7 2. Pupil outcomes: • Student achievement – priority 4 • Other student outcomes – priority 8 LCFF calculations 3. Engagement: The Fiscal Crisis & Management Assistance Team posted the first iteration of the LCFF calculator at the end of October 2013 (fcmat.org/local-control-funding-formularesources). It is considered one of the most reliable calculators for projecting an LEA’s LCFF base grant, supplemental grant, concentration grant, K-3 GSA funds and add-on apportionments. The LCFF calculator has evolved, and updated revisions have been posted to the FCMAT website to ensure accuracy of the LCFF calculations. Because the LCFF calculations utilize student data from the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System, it is critical that a ͍