Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Tentative Reaction to Murphy FY2019 Budget Proposal

UPDATED STATE AID ANALYSIS IS HERE

On Tuesday, March 13th, Phil Murphy gave his first budget address.

The budget address gives the amount of money Phil Murphy wants the state to spend in various categories.  It does not include the amount of state aid every district will get.  District-specific data will come out two days later, on Thursday, March 15th.  Murphy's speech is, by necessity, light on details, but more information is available in the FY2019 "Budget in Brief."

The budget assumes $1.7 billion from various tax increases that the legislature may not approve.  These tax increases of uncertain fate include raising the top income tax bracket to 10.75% (+$765 million), raising the sales tax to 7.0% and broadening it (+$581 million), "modernizing" corporate taxes (+$110 million), and taxing marijuana (+$80 million).  It also assumes savings from various health benefits reforms (- $118.7 million).

Despite the large increase from natural revenue growth and tax increases, Phil Murphy only proposes increasing K-12 aid by $283 million, saying that this will bring New Jersey to "full funding" in four years.

Update: Uncapped Aid is available here.



Reactions:
Murphy Spreads Confusion Over the Size of the Deficit
As before, Murphy is pretending in public that SFRA's deficit is only $1 billion, despite the existence of the State Aid Growth Limits that reduce the amount of aid a district can gain in a year.

Buried in the "Budget in Brief" is a tacit admittance that there is a difference between the statutory deficit (using that term) and the real, Uncapped Aid deficit, "This budget represents year one of a four-year ramp-up to full statutory funding that will ensure every public school district has the resources needed to provide all of New Jersey’s children with the excellent education they deserve." (see page 9)

As welcome as this (obscure, tacit) concession is, the statute of SFRA itself is extremely flawed, since new aid is based on a district's existing aid, not the district's deficit, thereby giving the most underaided districts the smallest increases.

Moreover, Capped Aid is itself supposed to be an incremental target, so by setting a four-year ramp up to that, Murphy is creating a series of incremental steps to what is supposed to be an incremental target.

It would be extremely unfair to make districts who are getting less than 50% of their Uncapped Aid to wait four years just to get a 10% or 20% increase in what they get now.

Also, Murphy's FY2019 budget depends on new revenue from various tax increases and uses additional revenue from a temporary income tax surge NJ is enjoying. Since Murphy cannot pass a tax increase every year, and the income tax surge will taper off, this means that Murphy will not have enough money to increase K-12 aid by ~$280 million per year for the next three years.


This means that it is all the more important to phase-out Adjustment Aid and start doing it NOW.

A Wide Distribution of New Aid = Less Help for the Severely Underaided

If 94% of districts are indeed gaining state aid and only 65% of NJ's districts are underaided, then Murphy is increasing state aid for numerous districts who are already overaided.  We won't know until Thursday what exactly he is doing, but it may be that he is undoing the cuts to Adjustment Aid that occurred in 2010, 2013, and 2017.

More of the State's Money is Going to Education Than Ever Before

The percentage of the state's budget going to education is at an all time high of 40% - $14.95 billion out of $37.4 billion.  (that includes lottery money)

In FY2018 education spending was 39.6% of the budget. In 2001 education spending was only 30% of the budget.

$14.95 billion for New Jersey's 1,373,267 students works out to $10,886 per student, an amount that is nearly equal to the national local+state+federal school spending average of $11,392 per student.

Municipal aid is being flat-funded, with a $12 million increase, from $1.524.2 billion to $1.536.2 billion. That is a 0.8% increase, which is much less than inflation. (see page 17 of the BIB)

Huge Increase for School Construction (Probably for the Abbotts)

The $148.3 million increase in school construction money is much larger than the previous two years. For FY2018 school construction debt service only increased by $20.5 million; for FY2017 school construction debt service increased by $52.1 million.

I don't know exactly why there is going to be a tremendous increase in construction debt service. It was not predicted in recent State Debt Reports, so it is likely that Phil Murphy plans another round of Abbott construction bonding.

Tens of Millions for PreK and "Free" Community College, Flat Funding of Extraordinary Aid

There is no increase in Extraordinary Aid. Extraordinary Aid is being flat-funded at $195 million.  (Extraordinary Aid is the state's reimbursement for Out Of District tuition for students with special needs)

Flat-funding of Extraordinary Aid will be devastating for Lakewood.

Flat Funding, in Per Student Terms, for Higher Ed
This budget continues the long process of abandoning NJ's middle class by neglecting higher ed.

Higher Ed funding (outside of communities colleges) is only increasing by 3%. In per student and inflation-adjusted terms, that's flat funding at best.

NJ's higher ed funding as a percentage of the budget is probably falling to new low.

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