Legislature(2021 - 2022)ADAMS 519

03/04/2021 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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Audio Topic
01:33:45 PM Start
01:34:47 PM HB69 || HB71
01:35:05 PM Presentation: Fy 21 Student Enrollment Counts and Covid-19
03:37:53 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 69 APPROP: OPERATING BUDGET/LOANS/FUNDS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+= HB 71 APPROP: MENTAL HEALTH BUDGET TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Presentations: TELECONFERENCED
K-12 FY 22 Operating & Formula
Walk Through by Dept. of Education & Early
Development
FY 21 Student Enrollment Counts & COVID-19
Federal Relief Funding by:
- Heidi Teshner, Director, Finance & Support
Services
- Lacey Sanders, Administrative Services
Director, Dept. of Education & Early
Development, Office of Management & Budget
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
HOUSE BILL NO. 69                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     "An  Act making  appropriations for  the operating  and                                                                    
     loan  program  expenses  of state  government  and  for                                                                    
     certain   programs;    capitalizing   funds;   amending                                                                    
     appropriations;    making   reappropriations;    making                                                                    
     supplemental   appropriations;  making   appropriations                                                                    
     under art.  IX, sec.  17(c), Constitution of  the State                                                                    
     of  Alaska,  from  the  constitutional  budget  reserve                                                                    
     fund; and providing for an effective date."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE BILL NO. 71                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     "An  Act making  appropriations for  the operating  and                                                                    
     capital    expenses   of    the   state's    integrated                                                                    
     comprehensive    mental    health    program;    making                                                                    
     supplemental  appropriations;  and   providing  for  an                                                                    
     effective date."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:34:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION:  K-12  FY  22  OPERATING  AND  FORMULA  WALK-                                                                  
THROUGH BY DEED                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION: FY 21 STUDENT ENROLLMENT COUNTS AND COVID-19                                                                   
FEDERAL RELIEF FUNDING BY DEED                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:35:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
HEIDI  TESHNER,  DIRECTOR,  FINANCE  AND  SUPPORT  SERVICES,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT   OF  EDUCATION   AND   EARLY  DEVELOPMENT   (via                                                                    
teleconference),  Introduced  the  PowerPoint  Presentation:                                                                    
"FY2021 Student Enrollment Counts  and COVID-19 K-12 Federal                                                                    
Relief  Funding." She  reviewed the  presentation agenda  on                                                                    
slide 2.  She would cover  a review  of the FY  21 statewide                                                                    
enrollment  counts, explain  the foundation  payment process                                                                    
and  the  advanced  process,  briefly  address  the  federal                                                                    
impact  aid disparity  tests, and  address a  few additional                                                                    
state-funded programs  that were affected by  the changes in                                                                    
enrollment   counts.   Lacy    Sanders,   the   department's                                                                    
administrative services  director, would provide  a COVID-19                                                                    
federal  relief funding  overview.  She  would conclude  the                                                                    
presentation  with a  high-level  overview  of seven  school                                                                    
district snapshots.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  discussed the public school  funding formula on                                                                    
slide  3 and  slide  4. She  reported  that the  legislature                                                                    
provided   a  formula   in   statute   for  funding   school                                                                    
operational costs. It  was referred to as  the public school                                                                    
funding  formula,  more  commonly known  as  the  foundation                                                                    
formula. The  formula was  adopted under  Senate Bill  36 in                                                                    
1998, implemented  in 1999, and  defined in  Alaska Statute,                                                                    
Title 14, Chapter  17. The funding for  each school district                                                                    
was  a  combination  of  their  state  aid,  required  local                                                                    
contribution,  and federal  impact aid.  She noted  that the                                                                    
Regional Educational  Attendance Areas (REAAs) did  not have                                                                    
a  required  local  contribution,  and there  were  19  REAA                                                                    
school districts in Alaska. She  indicated a school district                                                                    
was  only  eligible  for foundation  funding  as  calculated                                                                    
under the formula and set out in AS 14.17.410.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner continued  that the  first step  in determining                                                                    
state  aid for  a district  to determine  the average  daily                                                                    
membership (ADM) for  each school. She provided  a couple of                                                                    
links on  the slide. The  first link was the  school finance                                                                    
website which  included the  foundation funding  formula and                                                                    
various  publications providing  historical  ADM data,  base                                                                    
student  allocation (BSA)  histories, and  annual foundation                                                                    
reports. In  addition, the committee had  been provided with                                                                    
two supplemental  handouts. Handout One, an  8-page document                                                                    
titled,  "The  Public   School  Funding  Program  Overview,"                                                                    
walked through each  step of the formula and  could be found                                                                    
at the  second link on the  slide. Handout Two was  a 1-page                                                                    
document  outlining changes  made to  the formula  over time                                                                    
titled,  "Alaska Public  School  Funding Foundation  Formula                                                                    
History."                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner talked about the  importance of the annual count                                                                    
period  on slide  5. The  average daily  membership was  the                                                                    
defined term  for student count  data and was the  number of                                                                    
enrolled  students during  the  20  school-day count  period                                                                    
which  ended on  the fourth  Friday of  October. For  school                                                                    
year  2020-2021  the 20  school-day  count  period began  on                                                                    
September 28th  and  ended  on  October 23rd.  In  order  to                                                                    
determine  state  aid,  districts were  required  to  submit                                                                    
their  ADM to  the  department within  two  weeks after  the                                                                    
count  period  ended in  accordance  with  statute. For  the                                                                    
2020-2021 school year count period,  numbers were due to the                                                                    
department November 6th. Based  on statute, the student data                                                                    
from  the  count  period  was the  starting  point  for  all                                                                    
calculations that lead to the  determination of state aid to                                                                    
school districts.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:39:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner moved to slide 6  to look at the FY 21 statewide                                                                    
school  enrollment counts.  She pointed  to the  top of  the                                                                    
slide which showed the statewide  FY 21 Oasis update student                                                                    
count data  compared to  the FY  21 projected  student count                                                                    
data  and the  FY 20  actual student  count data.  Also, she                                                                    
provided the FY 22 projected  data comparing it to the FY 21                                                                    
Oasis number.  For reference, the  FY 21 projected  data was                                                                    
provided to  the department in  November 2019  in accordance                                                                    
with statute. The counts were  used to determine and prepare                                                                    
the FY  21 governor's  budget. Projected  data was  used for                                                                    
budgetary purposes  only at the  statewide level,  and there                                                                    
was  no provision  in  statute  to pay  state  aid based  on                                                                    
projected  student  counts. She  continued  that  the FY  21                                                                    
Oasis data  was a result of  the department's reconciliation                                                                    
and review  of the count  data provided by  districts during                                                                    
the 20-day count period in October.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner continued that  annually the department reviewed                                                                    
the  data  submitted  initially  to  remove  all  duplicates                                                                    
ensuring no  student received  more than  one ADM  count and                                                                    
special education intensive student  reviews. She noted that                                                                    
the  department  was  wrapping   up  the  special  education                                                                    
intensive counts  presently. Any resulting changes  were not                                                                    
reflected  in the  numbers being  presented  in the  current                                                                    
meeting. She  indicated that  in the  FY 22  projected data,                                                                    
the projections provided by districts  in November 2020 were                                                                    
used in order to prepare the FY 22 governor's budget.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner drew  attention  to  the table  at  the top  of                                                                    
slide 6.  The  FY 21  Oasis  regular  ADM brick  and  mortar                                                                    
student   number   decreased   15,352.91,  a   decrease   of                                                                    
13.4 percent compared  to the projected  data for FY  21. In                                                                    
addition, the  FY 21  Oasis correspondence  daily membership                                                                    
increased  13,445.8, an  increase of  94.9 percent  over the                                                                    
projected  data.  The  overall  ADM  decreased  1,907.11,  a                                                                    
decrease  of   1.5  percent.  Finally,  the   ADM  increased                                                                    
5,698.09, an increase  of 2.2 percent compared  to the FY 21                                                                    
projected count.  She indicated slide 8  of the presentation                                                                    
provided a glance at the  factors used to determine the ADM.                                                                    
She would address them in a couple of slides.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter asked if  Ms. Teshner could provide                                                                    
a historical  look at  the ADM over  the previous  10 years.                                                                    
Ms.   Teshner  responded   that   she   could  provide   the                                                                    
information  to  the  committee.   She  indicated  that  the                                                                    
information could also be found  on the department's website                                                                    
and extended further back than 10 years.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner commented that the  main factors contributing to                                                                    
the  increase in  the ADM  was the  adjusted-for-school-size                                                                    
ADM,   the  hold   harmless  provision,   and  a   shift  in                                                                    
correspondence.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool referenced the  1,907.11 decrease in the                                                                    
ADM.  He wondered  if  any  research had  been  done on  the                                                                    
decrease  in  pupil counts.  Ms.  Teshner  replied that  the                                                                    
department received  a request to specifically  reach out to                                                                    
the  districts to  find  out where  students  had gone.  The                                                                    
trend was that  students had either left the  state or moved                                                                    
to  a  private  education  program or  facility.  She  could                                                                    
provide the data once the department received it.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:44:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  continued  to  slide   7  regarding  the  hold                                                                    
harmless  provision  available   to  school  districts.  The                                                                    
provision  was enacted  in 2008  under  HB 273  [Legislation                                                                    
passed  in  2008  regarding education  funding]  for  school                                                                    
districts  who   had  experienced   a  reduction   in  their                                                                    
brick-and-mortar schools'  ADM after they had  been adjusted                                                                    
for the school size in the foundation formula.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  reported that eligibility was  determined after                                                                    
the    districts'    adjusted-for-school-size   ADMs    were                                                                    
calculated  and  totaled  for all  schools  resulting  in  a                                                                    
statewide  district total.  The  sum total  of a  district's                                                                    
adjusted-for-school-size  ADM  was  compared  to  the  prior                                                                    
fiscal year's total to determine  if there was a decrease of                                                                    
5 percent  or more. If  the answer  was yes, the  prior year                                                                    
was locked  in as the base  year for the following  3 years,                                                                    
and the  new school size  adjustment with the  hold harmless                                                                    
provision continued  through the formula  adjustments, which                                                                    
she  would  address  briefly  on  the  following  slide.  It                                                                    
resulted in approximately 75 percent  of the base need being                                                                    
restored in the first year.  The hold harmless provision was                                                                    
available to  districts over a 3-year  step-down: 75 percent                                                                    
the first year;  50 percent the second year;  and 25 percent                                                                    
the  third and  final  year, as  long  as the  adjusted-for-                                                                    
school-size ADM stayed below the  established base year. The                                                                    
3-year  step-down allowed  time  for  districts' budgets  to                                                                    
adjust  to   the  decreased  funding  that   came  with  the                                                                    
reduction of their brick-and-mortar schools' ADM.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  suggested  that if  there  was  a                                                                    
5.1 percent  drop in  enrollment,  the  step-down should  be                                                                    
94.9 percent. He wondered why  a drop in enrollment resulted                                                                    
in a  greater reduction  than the  calculation for  the ADM.                                                                    
Ms.  Teshner   responded  that   the  statute   indicated  a                                                                    
5 percent  trigger  with  a  3-year  step-down  of  75/50/25                                                                    
percent.  She  did  not  have  the history  as  to  why  the                                                                    
specific trigger and step-downs were chosen.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter had a  question about the 5 percent                                                                    
total loss  in enrollment.  He asked  if the  percentage was                                                                    
factored   on   total  or   regular   ADM.   He  asked   for                                                                    
clarification. Ms. Teshner replied  that the department used                                                                    
the  school  size ADM.  Once  the  ADM was  determined,  the                                                                    
department ran it through the  school size factor table. The                                                                    
resulting number  was compared  to the  number in  the prior                                                                    
year to  see if  there was  a reduction  in enrollment  of 5                                                                    
percent or more.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter  wanted  to see  the  relationship                                                                    
between a school size determination  that triggered the hold                                                                    
harmless provision  with an  increase in  correspondence not                                                                    
factored  into  the  provision.  Ms.  Teshner  replied  that                                                                    
because  correspondence students  were not  run through  the                                                                    
school size  factor table,  a reduction  of brick-and-mortar                                                                    
moved them out  of the calculation which  then triggered the                                                                    
hold  harmless  provision.  She   could  provide  detail  by                                                                    
district that showed the school size change.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:49:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  understood  the 5  percent  enrollment                                                                    
loss.   He  asked   for   further  clarification   regarding                                                                    
75 percent. Ms. Teshner  indicated it was 75  percent of the                                                                    
basic need. She  elaborated that the formula  was applied to                                                                    
all  of  the factors  and  multiplied  by the  base  student                                                                    
allocation (BSA) to  reach the basic need  amount. The basic                                                                    
need amount equaled the cost  to run a school district based                                                                    
on  the  formula.  She  continued  to  explain  that  school                                                                    
districts  with  a 5  percent  or  more reduction  in  their                                                                    
school size  ADM would receive  75 percent of the  amount in                                                                    
the first  year. A reduction  of 5 percent pertained  to the                                                                    
school size ADM rather  than enrollment. A school district's                                                                    
basic  need  was  determined after  enrollment  counts  were                                                                    
submitted and ran through the  school size factor table. The                                                                    
number  was then  compared  to  the prior  year.  It was  75                                                                    
percent of the amount of basic need.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool clarified that it  was not 75 percent of                                                                    
funding. He also  remarked that the 5 percent  was not based                                                                    
on total  enrollment. A table  was applied.  The calculation                                                                    
was multi-fold.  Ms. Teshner referred  to Handout  One which                                                                    
walked  through  the  formula. It  provided  greater  detail                                                                    
about the numbers.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  returned to  the hold  harmless provision.                                                                    
He  suggested the  impact would  be significantly  different                                                                    
depending  on the  school and  district. For  instance, some                                                                    
school   districts    participated   in   revenue-generating                                                                    
correspondence  programs   while  others  did   not.  School                                                                    
districts  received  90  percent  of the  ADM  for  students                                                                    
participating   in   a   district-sponsored   correspondence                                                                    
program.  Districts without  a  correspondence program  lost                                                                    
out. He asked if he was correct.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  responded in the affirmative.  For example, the                                                                    
Mat-Su  School   District  had  a   correspondence  program.                                                                    
Although the district lost  students in the brick-and-mortar                                                                    
school format,  most went to the  in-district correspondence                                                                    
program.  The  Mat-Su  School District  triggered  the  hold                                                                    
harmless    provision   but    gained   the    students   in                                                                    
correspondence   and  would   see  an   increase  in   their                                                                    
foundation funding  for FY 21.  Other districts who  did not                                                                    
have  a  correspondence  program   lost  students  in  their                                                                    
brick-and-mortar     schools     to    another     statewide                                                                    
correspondence   program   triggering  the   hold   harmless                                                                    
provision.  The districts  were  losing out  because of  not                                                                    
having  an  in-district  correspondence program  to  attract                                                                    
students.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:54:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz suggested  that  a district  who was  hurt                                                                    
financially because of  a large drop in  enrollment in their                                                                    
brick-and-mortar   schools   would   be   forced   to   make                                                                    
significant adjustments only being  funded at 75 percent. He                                                                    
thought the  circumstance would be  a Catch-22  because once                                                                    
COVID-19 was over students  would return to brick-and-mortar                                                                    
education.  However, the  programs  would  not be  available                                                                    
because of  school districts having  to make  reductions. He                                                                    
asked if  he was accurate  about the potential  outcomes for                                                                    
some districts.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  responded,  "Yes."  She  reported  there  were                                                                    
multiple factors  at play. A  district losing  funding, such                                                                    
as the  Wrangell School District who  lost several students,                                                                    
triggered the hold  harmless provision. They did  not have a                                                                    
correspondence program  and would  have to  make adjustments                                                                    
based on what  they thought would happen in  the current and                                                                    
following years.  Between the availability of  carrying over                                                                    
an  additional fund  balance at  the  end of  FY 20 to  help                                                                    
offset things, the Covid relief  funding would be available.                                                                    
Lacey Sanders  would be addressing the  Covid relief funding                                                                    
later  in  the presentation.  If  the  majority of  students                                                                    
returned  to  the  brick-and-mortar setting,  the  districts                                                                    
would  see  an increase  in  the  FY 22  foundation  formula                                                                    
amounts.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Rasmussen  asked how  many districts  did not                                                                    
have a  correspondence option. Ms. Teshner  thought about 23                                                                    
districts  had correspondence  programs,  whether they  were                                                                    
state-wide  or district-wide  programs.  Some districts  had                                                                    
multiple  programs. She  offered to  provide a  list to  the                                                                    
committee.  Representative Rasmussen  responded, "That'd  be                                                                    
great. Thank you."                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon thought the  issue of enrollment could                                                                    
be  a  key focus  in  the  current legislative  session.  He                                                                    
believed when the related statute  was implemented, the hold                                                                    
harmless provision  was directed  more towards  schools that                                                                    
had  a  student  population  on a  downward  trajectory.  He                                                                    
thought  it might  apply to  a  coastal fisheries  community                                                                    
where  the  fisheries  were  declining  or  to  a  community                                                                    
gradually losing  population. In the current  situation with                                                                    
the  impacts  of  Covid-19,   Alaska  enrollment  went  from                                                                    
114,000  students  state-wide  to   108,000  students  or  a                                                                    
2.2 percent  drop.  Some  of   the  school  districts  would                                                                    
recapture their students once Covid  became less of an issue                                                                    
and  things returned  to normal.  He did  not have  the full                                                                    
picture he  needed for context.  He also brought  up federal                                                                    
dollars and  hoped further presentations would  be scheduled                                                                    
to better understand the whole picture.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  remarked  that   he  would  be  requesting                                                                    
additional presentations.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:00:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool talked about  students from the district                                                                    
in  Fairbanks that  were  leaving  to attend  correspondence                                                                    
schools   in  other   places.  He   asked  about   increased                                                                    
enrollment in other correspondence districts.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  referred to  Handout  4  which showed  various                                                                    
funding levels.  She pointed to  the Galena  School District                                                                    
and  the  Yukon  Koyukuk  School   District  who  saw  large                                                                    
influxes in  their correspondence  programs and would  see a                                                                    
large increase in  their FY 21 changes.  She highlighted the                                                                    
first column. Galena  would see an increase  of $23 million,                                                                    
and the Yukon-Koyukuk School District  would see an increase                                                                    
of  $12.8  million. The  handout  showed  the increases  and                                                                    
decreases by  district and the  overall funding.  There were                                                                    
decreases  to  the  pupil transportation  programs  and  the                                                                    
residential schools for districts  who had them. The handout                                                                    
also  showed the  Covid relief  funding  and the  districts'                                                                    
unreserved fund  balances. The  net total  could be  seen in                                                                    
the last  column including districts  who still might  be in                                                                    
the red.  The department was  committed to working  with the                                                                    
districts  who were  projected to  be in  the red  to ensure                                                                    
they were  meeting their funding  needs. She  also clarified                                                                    
that there  were actually  35 correspondence  schools within                                                                    
the state. She reiterated she  would provide the list to the                                                                    
committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen asked  what the  Yukon-Koyukuk and                                                                    
Galena  School Districts  were doing  differently that  were                                                                    
bringing  other students  to their  correspondence programs.                                                                    
She suggested that  the goal for legislators  should be that                                                                    
the  state provided  the best  level of  education possible.                                                                    
She wondered  if the statutes  should be looked at  in terms                                                                    
of educational offerings.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  did not know  specifically what the  two school                                                                    
districts were doing differently. She  could get back to the                                                                    
committee. It was the choice  of the parents where to enroll                                                                    
their children. As  for what they were  providing, they both                                                                    
had a state-wide program that was well established.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Rasmussen  asked if Ms. Teshner  was aware of                                                                    
the level  of broadband  service needed for  those districts                                                                    
with  correspondence  programs.   Ms.  Teshner  thought  her                                                                    
question would  be better directed to  the school districts.                                                                    
She could try to follow up with additional information.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:05:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson suggested that  if the numbers were                                                                    
based on the  prior year's actual numbers,  could the Galena                                                                    
School  District  and  the  Yukon  Koyukuk  School  District                                                                    
programs  end  up  with  resources   that  surged  back  the                                                                    
following fall after Covid to brick-and-mortar facilities.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  replied  that the  department  had  to  follow                                                                    
statute. The  department would  pay on  the fiscal  year. If                                                                    
everyone were  to return to the  brick-and-mortar schools in                                                                    
their districts, then  Galena and Yukon Koyukuk  would see a                                                                    
potential large decrease just as  they were currently seeing                                                                    
a large increase in FY 22.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Josephson  asked   whether  there   was  an                                                                    
adjustment  that   could  be  made  mid-year.   Ms.  Teshner                                                                    
responded that the department only  had one count period per                                                                    
year and  would not make  any adjustments to the  count. She                                                                    
elaborated that  for the first  9 months of the  school year                                                                    
the  department paid  on the  prior  fiscal year  foundation                                                                    
numbers.  In  the last  3  months  of  the fiscal  year  the                                                                    
department trued  up the amount  and paid it on  the current                                                                    
year.  The districts  ended up  receiving  what they  should                                                                    
have  received all  year long.  She  indicated that  because                                                                    
students were enrolled in their  district, they were due the                                                                    
funds based on the formula.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Carpenter   suggested   that   two   school                                                                    
districts were  being discussed that experienced  a negative                                                                    
impact from not having  a correspondence program. He assumed                                                                    
the figures  included Covid federal  relief funding.  He saw                                                                    
two schools that were in the red.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner concurred  there were  two school  districts in                                                                    
the  red. She  highlighted that  the Kuspuk  School District                                                                    
was  blank in  the column  for the  unreserved fund  balance                                                                    
because she  had not received  their final FY 20  audit yet.                                                                    
They could potentially  be in the black  once the department                                                                    
received all of the necessary information.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  detailed  the public  school  funding  formula                                                                    
relating  to  the district  ADN  (Average  Daily Number)  on                                                                    
slide 8.  She would  be providing  a high-level  overview of                                                                    
the formula steps. After the  count period was reported, the                                                                    
ADM  for each  school was  then calculated  by applying  the                                                                    
school size  factor to the  count according to the  table in                                                                    
AS 14.17.410. The product of  that calculation was then used                                                                    
as a  factor in the  next step  of the formula.  Ms. Teshner                                                                    
walked through  the steps  of the  formula for  the district                                                                    
adjusted ADM.  All of the steps  shown on the slide  were in                                                                    
statute. She  indicated the slide  reflected the  first part                                                                    
of the formula.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:09:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner advanced  to slide  9:  "Public School  Funding                                                                    
Formula: State Aid." The  department multiplied the District                                                                    
ADM by the BSA of $5930  totaling the basic need. The number                                                                    
reflected what  it would cost  to run a  particular district                                                                    
based  on  student enrollment.  Then  she  would remove  the                                                                    
required  local contribution  amounts  for any  of the  city                                                                    
borough  school  districts.  Next,   she  would  remove  any                                                                    
deductible  impact aid  leaving  the state  aid amount.  The                                                                    
department  would then  add in  the quality  schools' grant.                                                                    
The  final   number  reflected  the  total   state  aid  the                                                                    
department provided  to districts  otherwise referred  to as                                                                    
the total state entitlement.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  noted there was  a range to  the local                                                                    
required contribution.  School districts  could be  near the                                                                    
bottom of  the range or  the top. He  asked if there  was an                                                                    
impact  to   state  support  if   a  community   decided  to                                                                    
contribute near the bottom of the range.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner replied that if  a municipality was at the lower                                                                    
end of the required local  contribution, it would affect the                                                                    
bottom  line  in  state aid.  The  department  would  remove                                                                    
anything excess up  to the maximum local  contribution. If a                                                                    
community  paid the  maximum  local  contribution, it  would                                                                    
reduce how much was paid in state aid.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon asked  if  there was  incentive for  a                                                                    
community  to pay  the minimum  level of  local contribution                                                                    
rather than the  maximum. Ms. Teshner replied  that based on                                                                    
the end total, they would  potentially see more state aid if                                                                    
they paid at the  minimum required contribution level versus                                                                    
the maximum.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter   asked  if  the   required  local                                                                    
contribution  was  impacted  because  of  the  Covid  crisis                                                                    
causing  a   fluctuation  in  student  count.   Ms.  Teshner                                                                    
referred to  page 6 of  Handout One. She indicated  that the                                                                    
handout showed  the required local  contribution and  how it                                                                    
was  determined  in  addition to  the  calculation  for  the                                                                    
maximum  local  contribution.   The  actual  required  local                                                                    
contribution was not affected  by enrollment. Rather, it was                                                                    
based on the full and true  value of the table property. The                                                                    
amount  was not  to exceed  45 percent  of the  prior year's                                                                    
basic  need.  It  was  not  affected  by  the  current  year                                                                    
enrollment changes.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  continued to the  bar graph on slide  10: "Base                                                                    
Student Allocation  (BSA) Funding." The pencil  chart showed                                                                    
changes  in the  BSA  from  FY 99  through  FY  21. It  also                                                                    
indicated  when   there  were  appropriations   of  one-time                                                                    
funding  outside of  the  foundation  formula. She  reported                                                                    
that the BSA  for FY 22 would remain at  the $5930 level but                                                                    
was not reflected on the slide.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner   reviewed  the  FY  21   statewide  enrollment                                                                    
comparison on slide  11. She had covered the  top portion of                                                                    
the slide when  she addressed slide 6.  Therefore, she would                                                                    
not go  through the  information again.  She pointed  to the                                                                    
FY 21 Oasis  update compared  to the  FY 21  projected which                                                                    
showed a  net increase  of approximately  $25 million  or an                                                                    
increase of 2  percent. She noted that it was  a $25 million                                                                    
increase in  the current fiscal year's  budget. In addition,                                                                    
the FY 21 Oasis update versus  the FY 21 actual showed a net                                                                    
increase of  $38.1 million  or an  increase of  3.1 percent.                                                                    
Looking  at the  FY 22  projected versus  the  FY 21  Oasis,                                                                    
there was  a decrease  of $45 million or  a decrease  of 6.1                                                                    
percent.  In the  Oasis  numbers  for FY  21  there were  32                                                                    
districts  who had  triggered  the  hold harmless  provision                                                                    
compared to the base in FY 20.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:15:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner scrolled  to  slide  12: "Foundations  Payments                                                                    
Process."  She explained  that outlined  in AS  14.17.610(a)                                                                    
payments  were  processed on  a  monthly  basis in  time  to                                                                    
arrive in districts' bank accounts  by the fifteenth of each                                                                    
month.  Payments for  the first  9 months  of the  year were                                                                    
calculated   based  on   the  prior   final  fiscal   year's                                                                    
foundation. For FY 21, the  first 9 months (July-March) were                                                                    
paid on  the final FY  20 foundation numbers.  The remaining                                                                    
3 months (April, May, and June)  were recalculated and trued                                                                    
up based  on the  finalized current year  foundation counts.                                                                    
For  FY 21,  the 3  previous months  would be  based on  the                                                                    
finalized FY  21 foundation counts.  It ensured that  by the                                                                    
end of the  year districts would be paid what  was due based                                                                    
on their current year reconciled final ADM counts.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool clarified  that  the  payments for  the                                                                    
last 3 months  of the current school year would  be based on                                                                    
enrollment in September. He thought  the last 3 months would                                                                    
show a decrease  in funding to most of  the school districts                                                                    
assuming most of them fell into the hold harmless category.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner could not say for  certain that there would be a                                                                    
decrease to  most school  districts. However,  she confirmed                                                                    
that anyone in the hold  harmless category who was not going                                                                    
to see an increase would see  less funding coming in for the                                                                    
last 3 months. She thought one  district would be in the red                                                                    
and their March  payment would need to be  adjusted in order                                                                    
to ensure they  had some kind of payment in  April, May, and                                                                    
June.  The  department  would  not  cut  the  districts  off                                                                    
because of their changes in enrollment.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool asked if 32  of 35 school districts fell                                                                    
into the  hold harmless  category. Ms. Teshner  replied that                                                                    
there were 54 school districts.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool  thought Ms. Teshner had  stated that if                                                                    
a school  district was in  the hold harmless  category, they                                                                    
would see a  reduction unless they received  an increase. He                                                                    
asked if the increase would be  in the form of federal Covid                                                                    
money.  Ms. Teshner  referred to  Handout Four.  An increase                                                                    
would be the result of  a combination of reductions in state                                                                    
aid  for foundation  funding  or any  kind  of state  funded                                                                    
programs,  and  additional  monies  including  Covid  relief                                                                    
funding and any unreserved fund balances.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wool   suggested   that   although   school                                                                    
districts  in  the hold  harmless  category  had less  money                                                                    
coming in, they would be able  to pay their bills because of                                                                    
federal  Covid funding  and  reserves.  However, they  would                                                                    
still  see a  reduction, as  the reserves  were monies  they                                                                    
already  had.  He asked  if  he  was accurate.  Ms.  Teshner                                                                    
responded that he  was correct. She added  that assuming the                                                                    
unreserved fund  balances were not already  committed by the                                                                    
school districts,  some of  it would be  used to  offset the                                                                    
reduction. The  department would work with  school districts                                                                    
to ensure that they remained even.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:19:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter  asked if  only 2  school districts                                                                    
who would  not have adequate funding.  Ms. Teshner indicated                                                                    
that on Handout Four there  were 2 school districts noted in                                                                    
the red.  The Kuspuk  School District had  uncertainty. Just                                                                    
looking at the change in  foundation numbers compared to the                                                                    
Covid relief funding numbers, there  were 7 school districts                                                                    
the   department  identified   that  were   seeing  negative                                                                    
numbers.  In other  words, if  the unreserved  fund balances                                                                    
were not included, there would  be 7 school districts in the                                                                    
red.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter   wanted  to  know   which  school                                                                    
districts  would have  a financial  problem  in the  current                                                                    
year. He referenced Handout Four  which showed only 2 school                                                                    
districts  who  would  have  a  difficult  time  financially                                                                    
through the  pandemic period. He  was focused  on foundation                                                                    
payments for  April, May,  and June.  He relayed  that there                                                                    
were  other amounts  of  money coming  into  the state  that                                                                    
should  impact legislators'  decisions about  what they  did                                                                    
with  foundation  payments. He  was  trying  to get  a  full                                                                    
picture.  He reiterated  that  in Handout  Four,  all but  2                                                                    
school districts would be in the black in the current year.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  responded, "That is  accurate." There  was also                                                                    
the potential  for Alaska to receive  another federal relief                                                                    
package  projected  to  be   a  significantly  large  dollar                                                                    
amount.  She hoped  the additional  funding  would help  the                                                                    
2 school districts in the red denoted in Handout Four.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool  had heard from school  districts in the                                                                    
Fairbanks  area   that  the  deficit  they   had,  based  on                                                                    
enrollment,  was  not  -$9.9   million,  it  was  closer  to                                                                    
-$27 million.   The   school  districts   were   considering                                                                    
approximately  240  layoffs.  In  the net  total  column  in                                                                    
Handout  Four,  the Fairbanks  School  District  was in  the                                                                    
black. However, the school district  indicated they were not                                                                    
in the black  and were considering having to  make some dire                                                                    
decisions. He wanted to look at the numbers more closely.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner   discussed  advances  related   to  foundation                                                                    
payments on  slide 13.  The department  also had  an advance                                                                    
provision that would allow districts,  if they experienced a                                                                    
large  increase in  student  enrollment  and were  concerned                                                                    
about  falling short  of funds.  The  provision would  allow                                                                    
school districts to request an  advance on their anticipated                                                                    
finalized  state aid  funding. Slide  13 showed  the process                                                                    
districts had to  follow in order to request  an advance and                                                                    
the   minimum  amount   of  information   required  by   the                                                                    
department.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:24:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  reviewed the federal impact  aid disparity test                                                                    
on slide  14. The  federal government  allowed the  State of                                                                    
Alaska  to deduct  90 percent  of its  allowable impact  aid                                                                    
from the  amount the foundation formula  allocated to school                                                                    
districts.  Per  AS  14.17.410, the  basic  need  minus  the                                                                    
required  local  contribution,  minus   the  90  percent  of                                                                    
eligible impact  aid equaled Alaska's state  aid. It reduced                                                                    
the  state's cost  by an  average of  about $85  million per                                                                    
year.  However, the  state was  only allowed  to deduct  the                                                                    
federal  impact aid  if there  was an  equalized formula  in                                                                    
accordance with federal law. Every  year the State of Alaska                                                                    
had to ask  permission from the federal  government in order                                                                    
to  take impact  aid  payments into  account in  determining                                                                    
state  aid  to districts.  It  was  an annual  certification                                                                    
which had to happen no later  than 120 days after the end of                                                                    
the  fiscal year.  Each year  the  department performed  the                                                                    
disparity test  which compared the  state's high-per-revenue                                                                    
to low-per-revenue  districts to each other.  If the funding                                                                    
differential  was  not  more than  a  25  percent  disparity                                                                    
between  districts' revenue  per adjusted  ADM, the  funding                                                                    
formula would be considered equal  and the state was allowed                                                                    
to  deduct the  approximate  $85 million.  It  was also  the                                                                    
reason  for  the  23  percent   cap  on  the  maximum  local                                                                    
contribution. It  was intended to ensure  that disparity did                                                                    
not exceed 25 percent.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon  clarified  that  local  contributions                                                                    
were  caped  because  of the  disparity  test.  Ms.  Teshner                                                                    
responded in the affirmative.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked  if the  state had  ever failed  the                                                                    
disparity test and whether it would  pass the test in FY 22.                                                                    
Ms.  Teshner indicated  there was  one  year in  the 80s  in                                                                    
which the  state failed the  test. Otherwise, the  state had                                                                    
passed. The  department just submitted  the FY  19 disparity                                                                    
test, as  the state always  submitted it a year  behind. The                                                                    
state passed the test with a disparity of 24.3 percent.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  added that  if the  state failed  the disparity                                                                    
test,  the formula  would not  be considered  equalized, and                                                                    
the  state  would  owe school  districts  approximately  $85                                                                    
million.  Alaska could  not deduct  the  federal impact  aid                                                                    
until the  state's education funding system  was recertified                                                                    
by  the federal  government.  The  department performed  the                                                                    
disparity  test after  the fiscal  year was  over. It  meant                                                                    
that the  state would owe  $85 million over  multiple years.                                                                    
If the  state were to fail  for FY 21, the  results would be                                                                    
determined  in FY  22,  and the  state  could not  recertify                                                                    
again  until at  least  FY  24. In  that  case, failing  the                                                                    
disparity   test  could   cost  the   state  a   minimum  of                                                                    
$255 million.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon   returned  to  the  topic   of  local                                                                    
contributions. He asked if his  school district in Fairbanks                                                                    
was at the bottom portion of  the range, it would be helping                                                                    
to meet the disparity test.  He wondered if he was accurate.                                                                    
Ms.  Teshner  replied  positively.   She  indicated  it  was                                                                    
preferred that  the large  districts fell  at the  middle of                                                                    
the  disparity  test  to  help with  not  exceeding  the  25                                                                    
percent. Representative  LeBon knew that. Ms.  Teshner noted                                                                    
that  the department  had  copies of  all  of the  disparity                                                                    
tests  dating  back  to  FY 09  on  its  foundation  formula                                                                    
website.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:29:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  advanced to  slide  15  which highlighted  the                                                                    
other state-funded  programs that used the  2020-2021 school                                                                    
year  enrollment counts  in determining  their  FY 21  final                                                                    
grant amounts. It included  the Pupil Transportation Program                                                                    
and the  residential schools. She  indicated that  the Pupil                                                                    
Transportation Program  was determined based on  a statutory                                                                    
formula in  AS 14.09.010. The calculation  involved taking a                                                                    
district's ADM  less their correspondence ADM  multiplied by                                                                    
a   per  student   amount  set   in  statute.   The  FY   21                                                                    
appropriation  was   approximately  $77  million,   and  the                                                                    
estimated  FY 21  actual  grants  totaled approximately  $65                                                                    
million   a decrease of almost  $12 million or a decrease of                                                                    
15  percent.  The state  also  had  the residential  schools                                                                    
program.  The  funding  was  also   determined  based  on  a                                                                    
statutory formula  in AS 14.16.200. The  funding outlined on                                                                    
slide 15, had two parts.  There was a residential stipend, a                                                                    
per-pupil monthly  stipend rate  multiplied by the  9 months                                                                    
multiplied by the actual  student count. Residential schools                                                                    
also received a one  round trip transportation reimbursement                                                                    
per student  which had  to be at  the least  expensive means                                                                    
between  the  student's  community   of  residence  and  the                                                                    
school. The  FY 21  appropriation was  $8.3 million  for the                                                                    
residential  schools.  The  estimated FY  21  actual  grants                                                                    
totaled $2.4 million.  There was a $5.9  million decrease or                                                                    
a decrease of  71 percent in grants  to residential schools.                                                                    
In  a  normal  year,  the   state  had  9  school  districts                                                                    
operating and 10 approved programs  across the state. For FY                                                                    
21 only 4 residential  schools (Galena, Lower Yukon, Nenana,                                                                    
and  Northwest   Arctic)  were  operating  but   at  reduced                                                                    
capacity.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter  asked if  the decrease was  due to                                                                    
Covid-19.  Ms. Teshner  responded  that all  was related  to                                                                    
Covid-19,  whether they  were open  or operating  at reduced                                                                    
capacity. She commented that starting  on slide 24 she would                                                                    
provide 7 district  snapshots reflecting enrollment changes,                                                                    
Covid  relief funding,  and  fund  balance information.  She                                                                    
passed the presentation over to Lacy Sanders.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:32:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LACEY SANDERS, ADMINISTRATIVE  SERVICES DIRECTOR, DEPARTMENT                                                                    
OF  EDUCATION AND  EARLY DEVELOPMENT,  OFFICE OF  MANAGEMENT                                                                    
AND  BUDGET, OFFICE  OF THE  GOVERNOR (via  teleconference),                                                                    
would provide the  committee with an update  on the Covid-19                                                                    
K-12 federal relief packages that  had been allocated to the                                                                    
state Department of Education  and Early Development (DEED).                                                                    
She  would be  sure to  pause at  the end  of each  slide to                                                                    
address any  questions or comments.  Towards the end  of the                                                                    
presentation, she  would walk through several  handouts that                                                                    
were in members' packets.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders  began  her  presentation   on  slide  17.  She                                                                    
explained  that the  Coronavirus  Aid,  Relief and  Economic                                                                    
Security (CARES) Act was signed  into law on March 27, 2020,                                                                    
and   appropriated  $30.75   billion   into  the   Education                                                                    
Stabilization  Fund.  At  a   national  level,  funding  was                                                                    
allocated in the following  manner. Approximately $3 billion                                                                    
was  appropriated into  the  Governor's Emergency  Education                                                                    
Relief Fund  (GEER I Fund). Approximately  $13.5 billion was                                                                    
appropriated  into  the   Elementary  and  Secondary  School                                                                    
Emergency Relief  Fund (ESSER I Fund).  Approximately $14.25                                                                    
billion was appropriated for  the Higher Education Emergency                                                                    
Relief Fund. In  her presentation for the day,  she would be                                                                    
speaking  about  ESSER and  GEER  Funds.  The University  of                                                                    
Alaska was  the appropriate  agency to  speak to  the Higher                                                                    
Education Emergency Relief Funds.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair   Ortiz   asked   about  the   Higher   Education                                                                    
Investment Fund.  He assumed it  did not relate to  what was                                                                    
currently  being discussed.  Ms. Sanders  responded that  if                                                                    
Representative  Ortiz was  referring  to  the Alaska  Higher                                                                    
Education  Investment Fund,  it was  a fund  that the  state                                                                    
used  as  an endowment  to  support  the Alaska  Performance                                                                    
Scholarship  Fund. She  wondered  if that  was  what he  was                                                                    
referring   to.  Representative   Ortiz  responded   in  the                                                                    
affirmative.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:35:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders   continued  with  the  CARES   Act  update  on                                                                    
slide 18.  The  slide  represented  the  State  of  Alaska's                                                                    
allocation of  CARES Act  ESSER I and  GEER 1  funds. First,                                                                    
the total  allocation of  ESSER I  funds was  $38.4 million.                                                                    
Local  education agencies  (school  districts) were  awarded                                                                    
$34.6 million  or 90  percent of the  funds. The  funds were                                                                    
allocated  to school  districts  based  on federal  guidance                                                                    
which  required  90 percent  of  the  state's allocation  be                                                                    
distributed  to   those  school   districts  based   on  the                                                                    
proportion of  Title 1, Part  A funds that they  received in                                                                    
the most  recent fiscal year.  Funding was available  to the                                                                    
school districts  to obligate until  September 30,  2022. As                                                                    
of  January   29,  2021,  school  districts   had  requested                                                                    
reimbursements totaling $11.3 million.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders continued  that  school  districts provided  an                                                                    
application and  a budget each  fiscal year for  the funding                                                                    
available to  them. She  reported that FY  20 was  the first                                                                    
year  that  funding  was   available  for  expenditure.  The                                                                    
department  was   currently  working   through  the   FY  21                                                                    
applications  and  requests  had been  submitted  by  school                                                                    
districts. The process would continue  into FY 22 and FY 23.                                                                    
She  reported   that  the  State  Education   Agency,  DEED,                                                                    
received  $3.8  million  to award  grants  or  contracts  to                                                                    
address   emergency  needs   resulting  from   the  Covid-19                                                                    
pandemic. A  small portion could be  used for administrative                                                                    
costs   and   the   funding   was   also   available   until                                                                    
September 20, 2022.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Sanders  reported   that  the   total  allocation   of                                                                    
GEER I Funds was  $6.5 million.  The purpose of  the funding                                                                    
was  to provide  emergency  assistance as  a  result of  the                                                                    
Covid-19    pandemic   in    support   of    education   and                                                                    
education-related  entities. The  funding was  available for                                                                    
the governor to allocate at  his discretion, and funding was                                                                    
allocated in  the following manner.  She conveyed  that $3.7                                                                    
million  was given  to school  districts,  $1.7 million  was                                                                    
given to institutes of higher  education, and $1 million was                                                                    
distributed  as   a  competitive  grant  award   to  various                                                                    
education  and   education-related  entities.  One   of  the                                                                    
handouts   which  she   would  walk   through  later,   DEED                                                                    
Handout 8,  identified the  education-related entities  that                                                                    
received the funding and the amount of the awards.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon asked if  she could provide information                                                                    
on  the  formula  for  disbursement   and  why  some  school                                                                    
districts  received  funding  while   others  did  not.  Ms.                                                                    
Sanders explained that when allocating  the original ESSER 1                                                                    
funding  it  was  determined  that  there  would  be  school                                                                    
districts  who  would not  receive  funding  because it  was                                                                    
based  on a  Title 1(a)  allocation. A  comparison was  done                                                                    
that allocated funding  to the 35 school  districts to bring                                                                    
them to an  amount that was equal to or  more than what they                                                                    
would have received  under a $30 million award  based on the                                                                    
foundation formula allocation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter asked  about  DEED's allotment  of                                                                    
$3.8 million.  He wondered  if she could  provide a  list of                                                                    
how the funding  was used. Ms. Sanders could  provide a list                                                                    
to  the committee.  She  indicated  that approximately  $2.8                                                                    
million had been  allocated or awarded which  left a balance                                                                    
of just over $800,000.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:40:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson referenced  the GEER  I Fund.  Ms.                                                                    
Sanders  had mentioned  applying  it against  a $30  million                                                                    
factor. He asked her to  repeat the information. Ms. Sanders                                                                    
clarified  that previously  there was  an appropriation  for                                                                    
$30  million  that  would  have  been  allocated  to  school                                                                    
districts.  The department  compared  what school  districts                                                                    
would have  received at  the time to  ensure that  what they                                                                    
received  through ESSER  and GEER  funding was  equal to  or                                                                    
greater than that amount.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson asked, relative  to the veto of the                                                                    
$30  million on  April  7th,  if there  was  a  way to  know                                                                    
whether ESSER I  and GEER I funds were a  response to normal                                                                    
needs or  supplemental needs relating  to the  pandemic. Ms.                                                                    
Sanders  replied that  the CARES  Act  funding was  provided                                                                    
with federal guidance to address  the impact of the Covid-19                                                                    
pandemic.  The  school districts  were  asked  to provide  a                                                                    
budget and  a narrative outlining  how they intended  to use                                                                    
that money. The school district  would have 3 years to spend                                                                    
the money. Some had already  spent it to address their needs                                                                    
and  some had  not. She  wondered  if she  had answered  the                                                                    
representative's question.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  responded, "Sort of." He  used the                                                                    
Gateway School  District and the  Kuspuk School  District as                                                                    
examples. He  suggested that  if they  spent money  on masks                                                                    
and plexiglass,  it would  not be the  normal need  that was                                                                    
vetoed. However, it would be  important to know whether they                                                                    
spent the  money on  things that  would have  otherwise been                                                                    
funded except  for the veto.  He felt it was  fundamental to                                                                    
have  the answer  to  his question  as  an appropriator.  He                                                                    
invited Ms. Sanders to comment.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders thought each school  district would be unique in                                                                    
their  needs.  She  suggested   inquiring  with  the  school                                                                    
districts directly.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders  additionally commented  on slide 18.  She noted                                                                    
that authority for ESSR I and  GEER I was approved through a                                                                    
revised program  legislative (RPL)that was presented  to the                                                                    
Legislative Budget and Audit Committee on May 1, 2020.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:45:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders moved  to slide 19 to discuss  the second relief                                                                    
package  from  the  federal  government     the  Coronavirus                                                                    
Response  and  Relief  Supplemental  Appropriations  (CRRSA)                                                                    
Act. The act  was signed into law on December  27, 2020, and                                                                    
appropriated  approximately $82  billion into  the Education                                                                    
Stabilization  Fund. Approximately  $4.1  billion went  into                                                                    
the  Governor's Emergency  Education  Relief  Fund (GEER  II                                                                    
Fund). Approximately $54.3 billion  went into the Elementary                                                                    
and Secondary School Emergency Relief  Fund (ESSER II Fund).                                                                    
Lastly,  approximately $21.7  billion went  into the  Higher                                                                    
Education Emergency Relief Fund.  She noted that the funding                                                                    
in the second round was referred  to as ESSER II and GEER II                                                                    
because the  funds were accounted for  separately from CARES                                                                    
Act funds. They second round  of funds had slightly expanded                                                                    
allowable uses  and a different period  of availability. She                                                                    
indicated  the slide  reflected  the funding  at a  national                                                                    
level.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders turned to slide 20  to walk through the State of                                                                    
Alaska's  allocation. She  began with  the state's  ESSER II                                                                    
funds. The  total allocation was  $159.7 million.  The local                                                                    
education  agencies,  the  school  districts,  were  awarded                                                                    
$143.7 million.  The funds  were allocated  the same  as the                                                                    
CARES  Act funding  based on  federal guidance  requiring 90                                                                    
percent  of  the state's  allocation  to  be distributed  to                                                                    
school districts based on the  proportion of Title 1, Part A                                                                    
funds they received in the  most recent fiscal year. Funding                                                                    
was  available  for  school   districts  to  obligate  until                                                                    
September  30,  2023, and  could  be  used for  expenditures                                                                    
dating   back  to   March  2020.   She  reported   that  the                                                                    
application  for  this  funding   was  available  on  DEED's                                                                    
website   presently,   and   school  districts   had   begun                                                                    
submitting applications recently.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders  continued  that the  State  Education  Agency,                                                                    
DEED, received  $15.2 million to  award grants  or contracts                                                                    
to  address  emergency  needs resulting  from  the  Covid-19                                                                    
pandemic. A small  portion of the funding could  be used for                                                                    
administrative   costs   and   was  also   available   until                                                                    
September 30, 2023.  Nothing had  been allocated  or awarded                                                                    
to-date.  She noted  that  ESSER II  funds  had an  expanded                                                                    
allowability of  activities compared to CARES  Act funds. It                                                                    
included allowing the  funds to be used  to address learning                                                                    
loss, summer  programming, and  for school  facility repairs                                                                    
that  reduced the  risk of  virus transmission  and improved                                                                    
air quality. The Department of  Education and Early learning                                                                    
had  received  questions  in the  past  about  water  system                                                                    
upgrades   and  investments   in   internet  and   broadband                                                                    
infrastructure.  Federal  guidance provided  allowances  for                                                                    
those uses.  She noted that school  districts determined how                                                                    
their  funding would  be used.  The department  reviewed the                                                                    
school   districts'   proposed   plans  and   requests   for                                                                    
reimbursements to ensure that  the spending followed federal                                                                    
guidance. Ultimately, school  districts were responsible for                                                                    
demonstrating  that their  plans  for  expenditures net  the                                                                    
federal   allowable  rules.   The  department   assisted  in                                                                    
determining if a use was  allowable and frequently addressed                                                                    
questions   from  school   districts   on  whether   certain                                                                    
purchases could and should be made.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:49:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  thought  the  funds  might  be  a                                                                    
source  for  districts  to   supplement  their  budgets.  He                                                                    
referred  to  one  of the  parameters,  addressing  learning                                                                    
loss, was fairly broad.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders confirmed that school  districts had the ability                                                                    
to  determine  how  they would  utilize  the  funding.  Each                                                                    
school  district would  use it  differently. For  example, a                                                                    
district  might have  seen savings  in some  areas of  their                                                                    
normal budgets,  and other areas  might have  seen increases                                                                    
due to the pandemic.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter noted  Ms.  Sanders had  mentioned                                                                    
that no money had been  allocated or awarded. He wondered if                                                                    
her  statement  was  in reference  to  the  state  education                                                                    
agency dollar figures. Ms. Sanders  replied that her comment                                                                    
at the  time was specific to  the $15 million for  the state                                                                    
education  agency, Although  the last  time she  checked, no                                                                    
funding of  the $143  million had  been awarded  because the                                                                    
application  process  for  school  districts  just  recently                                                                    
opened around February 15th.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders  continued  to provide  a  detailed  update  on                                                                    
slide 21.   She  reported   that  the   State  of   Alaska's                                                                    
allocation of  GEER II funds was  approximately $8.2 million                                                                    
and  was broken  into  two  parts. The  first  part was  the                                                                    
governor's  supplemental allocation  and totaled  about $2.8                                                                    
million similar to  the funding that was  received under the                                                                    
CARES Act  appropriation. The  governor could  determine and                                                                    
allocate  the funding.  The uses  were similar  and included                                                                    
preventing, preparing  for, and  responding to  the Covid-19                                                                    
pandemic.  Presently, the  governor had  not determined  how                                                                    
the funding  would be allocated  and had until  January 2022                                                                    
to award the funds.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders continued that there  was a new provision in the                                                                    
CRRSA  Act  titled,   Emergency  Assistance  for  Non-Public                                                                    
Schools  (EANS).  The  total allocation  for  the  State  of                                                                    
Alaska  was $5.4  million The  funding would  be awarded  to                                                                    
non-public   schools   in   partnership   with   DEED.   The                                                                    
application   for  the   funding  was   made  available   on                                                                    
February 12,  2021,  and  non-public schools  had  a  30-day                                                                    
period  to submit  their application  for  the funding.  She                                                                    
elaborated   that  because   non-public  schools   were  not                                                                    
required  to register  with DEED,  it made  it difficult  to                                                                    
provide  a  comprehensive  list  of  eligible  schools.  The                                                                    
Department  of  Education  and Early  Childhood  Development                                                                    
conducted  an extensive  search  including contacting  local                                                                    
school  districts,  searching  websites, and  through  state                                                                    
databases.  Included  in  members'  packets was  a  list  of                                                                    
schools that  had been identified  as non-public  schools in                                                                    
Alaska. However, once the  application period was completed,                                                                    
the department  might identify additional  eligible schools.                                                                    
She  noted  that both  ESSR  II  and  GEER II  funding  were                                                                    
approved  again  through  the RPL  process.  The  department                                                                    
resented  an  RPL  to  the   Legislative  Budget  and  Audit                                                                    
Committee on January 18, 2021.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:54:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  asked what  document Ms.  Sanders referred                                                                    
to that  indicated how many  non-public schools were  in the                                                                    
state.  Ms. Sanders  replied that  the information  could be                                                                    
found in Handout  9. Vice-Chair Ortiz asked how  many of the                                                                    
schools had applied  so far. Ms. Sanders  believed 2 schools                                                                    
had submitted  applications. Her  staff was  working closely                                                                    
with  the non-public  schools  to  complete the  application                                                                    
process.  She  thought many  of  the  applications would  be                                                                    
submitted towards the end of the period.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Rasmussen  asked for the  date of the  end of                                                                    
the   period.    Ms.   Sanders   thought   the    date   was                                                                    
March 12, 2021.  It  was  a 30-day  period  that  opened  on                                                                    
February 12, 2021.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative Rasmussen  asked Ms.  Sanders to  explain the                                                                    
criteria  or  how  the  department   planned  to  award  the                                                                    
funding, given  that the  department did  not know  how many                                                                    
schools   might  apply.   Ms.  Sanders   reported  that   no                                                                    
determination had been  made to-date on how  to allocate the                                                                    
funding.  The   department  was   waiting  to   receive  the                                                                    
applications to see  what types of requests  were being made                                                                    
and at what levels. She noted  that it was similar to school                                                                    
districts in that it was a reimbursement process.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen  asked  if  there  was  a  maximum                                                                    
amount of money school  districts could receive. Ms. Sanders                                                                    
clarified that Representative Rasmussen  was asking if there                                                                    
was  a  limit.  Representative Rasmussen  responded  in  the                                                                    
affirmative.  Ms.  Sanders  replied  that there  was  not  a                                                                    
limit. It was up to  DEED working with the governor's office                                                                    
to  determine how  and at  what level  the funding  would be                                                                    
allocated.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon assumed  the  department was  reaching                                                                    
out  to  the  non-public  schools  to  inform  them  of  the                                                                    
available funding. Ms.  Sanders responded affirmatively that                                                                    
the department  had contacted  each one  of the  schools. In                                                                    
addition, the  department held an online  seminar to address                                                                    
questions and  walk through  the application  period shortly                                                                    
following the  time the application was  made available. She                                                                    
reiterated that her  staff had reached out  to the no-public                                                                    
schools to  ensure they had  the information they  needed to                                                                    
complete an application.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon asked  if  a  determination had  been                                                                    
made  by the  administration  that there  was  no reason  to                                                                    
freeze  the 2020  enrollment  numbers  for school  districts                                                                    
since  there had  been three  disbursements of  funding from                                                                    
the  federal   government.  Ms.  Sanders  deferred   to  the                                                                    
commissioner.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Rasmussen asked if  Pre-K was included in the                                                                    
non-public schools. Ms. Sanders replied  that it was only K-                                                                    
12 as outlined in federal guidance.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen  asked  Ms. Sanders  if  she  knew                                                                    
whether  there   were  programs  available  for   the  pre-K                                                                    
providers  to  offset costs  related  to  the pandemic.  Ms.                                                                    
Sanders answered  that the Department  of Health  and Social                                                                    
Services  (DHSS) had  the  daycare  assistance programs  and                                                                    
would  be  able to  provide  her  with  a summary  they  had                                                                    
provided through grants to them.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:00:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Rasmussen asked  if the  day-care assistance                                                                    
program was different from funding  for pre-K. He family did                                                                    
not  qualify  for assistance,  but  she  had  her son  in  a                                                                    
private  preschool  program.  She was  thinking  of  private                                                                    
preschools that  had been impacted.  She thought  they would                                                                    
fall  under  early  learning and  development.  Ms.  Sanders                                                                    
relayed that it  was beyond the scope of  the programs being                                                                    
discussed  in the  current meeting.  The representative  was                                                                    
correct  that there  were pre-K  grant  programs within  the                                                                    
department.  However, the  daycare assistance  programs fell                                                                    
under DHSS.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Carpenter   referred   to   the   emergency                                                                    
assistance  for non-public  schools.  He  wondered if  there                                                                    
were federal requirements that  the non-public schools would                                                                    
have  to meet  to be  eligible for  funding. He  wondered if                                                                    
there  were   any  exclusion   for  religious   schools.  He                                                                    
recognized some religious schools  on the list of non-public                                                                    
schools. He assumed there were no exclusions on the list.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders  responded that there  was no  limit. Non-public                                                                    
schools  might include  a religious  entity. However,  there                                                                    
were  rules  on   how  the  funding  could   be  spent.  The                                                                    
department would  not be providing the  non-public schools a                                                                    
check  for spending.  Rather,  the  non-public schools  were                                                                    
submitting  applications  with a  plan  on  how the  funding                                                                    
would reduce the impacts of  the pandemic. Items such as air                                                                    
purifiers,   HVAC   modifications,  tablets   for   distance                                                                    
learning were examples of where the funding could be spent.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:03:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders advanced  to the pie charts on  slide 22 showing                                                                    
the  total education  stabilization funds.  The slide  was a                                                                    
visual  representation   of  the  ESSER  and   GEER  funding                                                                    
allocated to the State of Alaska.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders wanted  to walk through the  eight handouts that                                                                    
were in  members' packets, as  they contained  a significant                                                                    
amount of  information. The information might  be helpful in                                                                    
looking  at  specific  school   districts.  She  began  with                                                                    
Handout   3   which  was   a   summary   of  the   education                                                                    
stabilization funds that  had been allocated to  each of the                                                                    
school  districts. It  showed  what  each district  received                                                                    
whether  from the  CARES Act  or the  CRRSA Act  and whether                                                                    
from ESSER or GEER funds.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders moved  to  Handout 4  showed  the state  funded                                                                    
programs.  It  was  the  item  that  Ms.  Teshner  spoke  to                                                                    
earlier. It provided a summary  of the formula changes based                                                                    
on  the enrollment  changes districts  were seeing.  It also                                                                    
showed allocations  of the  CARES Act and  the CRRSA  Act as                                                                    
well as their FY 20 end reserve balances.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders  continued  to Handout  5  which  provided  the                                                                    
distribution of  CARES Act monies  to school  districts. The                                                                    
funding  had  been  awarded and  expended     reimbursed  to                                                                    
school districts as  of January 28, 2021. It  broke down the                                                                    
ESSER I  Funds and  the GEER I  Funds that  school districts                                                                    
received, what they spent, and their remaining balances.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Sanders  explained that Handout  6 and Handout  7 showed                                                                    
further details of how school  districts were spending their                                                                    
money. It  provided a  summary of  expenditures by  chart of                                                                    
accounts. Handout  6 was  specific to FY  20, and  Handout 7                                                                    
was specific to FY 21. She  continued that Handout 8 was the                                                                    
grant  award list  for  the  $1 million  awarded  in GEER  I                                                                    
funding. Handout  9 was the  list of non-public  schools she                                                                    
mentioned earlier.  Handout 10 was a  summary of terminology                                                                    
and definitions for Covid-19  relief funding. The department                                                                    
had  received  several  questions about  the  definition  of                                                                    
supplement,  not supplant,  as  well as  the maintenance  of                                                                    
effort requirements under  the CARES Act and  the CRRSA Act.                                                                    
The document  outlined the federal  guidance along  with the                                                                    
impact for DEED.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Sanders reviewed  additional CARES  Act allocations  on                                                                    
slide 23.  She wanted to  note other allocations  of funding                                                                    
the  department received.  The Child  Nutrition Program  was                                                                    
awarded $42.2  million for several food  service programs. A                                                                    
total of $28.3 million had  been expended. The funding had a                                                                    
limited period of availability. It  was only able to address                                                                    
expenses  from   March  202  through  September   2020.  The                                                                    
Libraries,  Archives,  and  Museums received  $66,100  award                                                                    
from the Institute  of Museum and Library  Services to award                                                                    
grants  to museums  and libraries  in  Alaska. She  reported                                                                    
that $63,300  had already been  awarded. Lastly,  the Alaska                                                                    
State Council  on the Arts  was awarded $421,500  for grants                                                                    
to  Alaskan  artists  of which  $385,500  had  already  been                                                                    
awarded.  She   concluded  her  prepared  remarks   and  was                                                                    
available for questions.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:08:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter referred  to Handout  5. He  asked                                                                    
why funds had not already  been spent. Ms. Sanders indicated                                                                    
there  could be  variety of  reasons the  monies had  not be                                                                    
spent. For  example, some  monies would  be used  for summer                                                                    
school programs.  It was different  for each  recipient. She                                                                    
noted  that  the  period of  availability  on  the  specific                                                                    
funding was over several years.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson relayed  that the  Fairbanks Daily                                                                    
News Minor was reporting  that the Fairbanks School District                                                                    
was  projected to  lose 243  jobs  with a  shortfall of  $27                                                                    
million. The  district was  looking at  the demise  of music                                                                    
and outdoor  recess for  elementary schools.  Layoff notices                                                                    
would go  out in May  unless the legislature  intervened. He                                                                    
referred to slide 27. He  asked how the Fairbanks Daily News                                                                    
Miner   could  report   such   a   dire  circumstance   when                                                                    
significant  relief  was  available. Ms.  Sanders  commented                                                                    
that  it  was  the  first  time she  had  heard  the  number                                                                    
mentioned. She  would need to review  the article. Currently                                                                    
she did not have any insightful comments on the topic.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson if  there was  anything she  could                                                                    
report  to  the  committee  that was  going  on  behind  the                                                                    
scenes. He  thought that  in the  absence of  COVID dollars,                                                                    
what were the districts  experiencing. Ms. Sanders suggested                                                                    
that it  would be helpful  to speak with the  districts. She                                                                    
could  provide  the numbers  and  what  DEED was  providing.                                                                    
However,  she  could  not  speak on  behalf  of  the  school                                                                    
districts.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:11:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner would  be  providing  seven district  snapshots                                                                    
that included  the foundation  funding totals,  Covid relief                                                                    
funding,  and the  FY 20  unreserved fund  balance data  for                                                                    
Anchorage,    Dillingham,   Fairbanks,    Kenai   Peninsula,                                                                    
Ketchikan, Mat-Su, and the Nome  school districts. She began                                                                    
with  the  Anchorage  School  District   on  slide  25.  She                                                                    
reported that  the top of the  slide was the same  layout as                                                                    
she shared on slide 11. There  were two tables at the bottom                                                                    
of the slide. The left-hand  portion of the slide showed the                                                                    
CARES Act  allocations, expenditures, and  percentage spent.                                                                    
It   also   showed   the   district's   CRRSA   allocations,                                                                    
expenditures, and percentage spent.  The department was just                                                                    
receiving  the  CRRSA Act  budgets  from  districts. In  the                                                                    
seven  districts   she  mentioned,   there  were   no  CRRSA                                                                    
expenditures to-date.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner continued that on  the lower right-hand side was                                                                    
the  FY  20  operating  fund balance  breakout  between  the                                                                    
reserved  and  unreserved  portions and  the  percentage  of                                                                    
unreserved  balance. Per  AS 14.17.505  and  related to  the                                                                    
fund  balance in  a school  district's  operating budget,  a                                                                    
district was not  allowed to accumulate in a  fiscal year an                                                                    
unreserved  portion  of its  year-end  fund  balance in  its                                                                    
operating fund (as defined  in the department's regulations)                                                                    
that was  greater than  10 percent  of its  expenditures for                                                                    
that fiscal year. All money in  a year-end fund balance of a                                                                    
district's  school  operating fund  was  subject  to the  10                                                                    
percent limit  except if  it was in  one of  six categories:                                                                    
encumbrances,  inventory,  prepaid  expenditures  (including                                                                    
fuel), self-insurance, any federal  impact aid received, and                                                                    
any   unexpended   annual   student  allotment   money   for                                                                    
correspondence programs.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  reported  that Governor  Dunleavy  issued  the                                                                    
order of suspension number 3  which suspended the statute in                                                                    
regulation and allowed school districts  to retain more than                                                                    
10 percent of their unreserved  fund balance from FY 20 into                                                                    
FY 21  in response to  Covid. At a  quick glance, of  the 52                                                                    
audits  the  department  had  received  to-date,  43  school                                                                    
districts reported  they were carrying over  more unreserved                                                                    
fund balance  at the end of  FY 20 versus what  they carried                                                                    
at the end  of FY 19. In addition, 26  of the districts were                                                                    
reporting  an  unreserved  fund   balance  greater  than  10                                                                    
percent.  The additional  carryover  was  available to  help                                                                    
districts  address funding  fluctuations  due to  enrollment                                                                    
and Covid response.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  highlighted that the Anchorage  School District                                                                    
was  showing an  increase  of almost  150  percent in  their                                                                    
correspondence ADM  from the  FY 21  projected to  the FY 21                                                                    
Oasis  update.  They  saw   movement  of  approximately  170                                                                    
students  from  their  brick-and-mortar  programs  to  their                                                                    
district  correspondence programs.  Anchorage triggered  the                                                                    
Hold  Harmless provision  in FY  21  and had  a decrease  of                                                                    
11.19 percent  in their school  size ADM compared to  FY 20.                                                                    
They were  estimated to  receive approximately  $5.8 million                                                                    
less than their  FY 21 projected foundation  amount and $8.1                                                                    
million less than their  actual foundation amount. Anchorage                                                                    
had  spent  approximately  59  percent   of  their  ESSER  I                                                                    
allocation  and they  did not  receive  an allocation  under                                                                    
GEER  I.  Anchorage  School District  anticipated  receiving                                                                    
about $50  million in ESSER  II funds. At  the end of  FY 20                                                                    
Anchorage reported  a 10.34 percent unreserved  fund balance                                                                    
in their operating fund.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:17:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner provided  a snapshot  of the  Dillingham School                                                                    
District on slide 26. The  district was seeing a decrease of                                                                    
9.4  percent in  their  regular brick-and-mortar  ADM and  a                                                                    
decrease  of 100  percent in  their correspondence  ADM. The                                                                    
district  triggered the  hold  harmless  provision, as  they                                                                    
experienced  a 5.21  percent decrease  in their  school size                                                                    
ADM.  They were  expected to  get about  $194,000 less  than                                                                    
their FY  projected foundation  amount. The  school district                                                                    
reported spending  100 percent of  their ESSER I and  GEER I                                                                    
allocations. They  expected to receive $430,000  in ESSER II                                                                    
Funds. At  the end of  FY 20  they reported a  10.79 percent                                                                    
unreserved fund balance in their district operating fund.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  continued  to slide  27:  "District  Snapshot:                                                                    
Fairbanks  North  Star  School District.  The  district  was                                                                    
showing  a 20.6  percent in  their regular  brick-and-mortar                                                                    
ADM and a 248 percent  increase in their correspondence ADM.                                                                    
They had  a statewide  correspondence program.  The district                                                                    
triggered the  hold harmless provision with  a 16.59 percent                                                                    
decrease in their  school size ADM. Based  on the district's                                                                    
counts, they  were estimated to  receive about  $7.5 million                                                                    
less in  their FY 21 projected  foundation amount. Fairbanks                                                                    
School District had spent about  65 percent of their ESSER I                                                                    
allocation and about 41 percent  of their GEER I allocation.                                                                    
The district was  expected to receive about  $9.7 million in                                                                    
ESSER  II funds.  Fairbanks had  a  4.71 percent  unreserved                                                                    
fund balance at the end of FY 20.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner reviewed the Kenai  Peninsula School District on                                                                    
slide 28. The  district reported a 22.6  percent decrease in                                                                    
their regular brick-and-mortar ADM  and 115 percent increase                                                                    
in   their  correspondence   ADM.  Comparative   to  FY   21                                                                    
projected, the  school district triggered the  hold harmless                                                                    
provision  in FY  21 with  an 18  percent decrease  in their                                                                    
school  size  ADM.  They  were  estimated  to  receive  $1.6                                                                    
million less  than their FY  21 projected  foundation amount                                                                    
and $2.6  million less  than their  FY 20  actual foundation                                                                    
amount.  The  Kenai  Peninsula  School  District  had  spent                                                                    
approximately  30 percent  of their  ESSER I  allocation and                                                                    
they  did not  receive  a GEER  I  allocation. The  district                                                                    
expected  to receive  approximately $9  million in  ESSER II                                                                    
funding. They had a 9.63  percent unreserved fund balance at                                                                    
the end of FY 20.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  discussed a  snapshot  view  of the  Ketchikan                                                                    
Gateway Borough School  District on slide 29.  They showed a                                                                    
$12.6 percent  decrease in their brick-and-mortar  ADM and a                                                                    
237  percent  increase  in  their  correspondence  ADM.  The                                                                    
district triggered the hold harmless  provision with a 10.04                                                                    
decrease in  their school size  ADM. They were  estimated to                                                                    
receive  approximately $1.2  million more  that their  FY 21                                                                    
projected  foundation  amount.  They   had  spent  about  56                                                                    
percent  of their  ESSER I  allocation and  approximately 75                                                                    
percent  of  their  GEER  I  allocation.  They  expected  to                                                                    
receive nearly  $2 million in  ESSER II funding. At  the end                                                                    
of FY  20 the Ketchikan  Gateway School District had  a 3.91                                                                    
percent unreserved fund balance.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:21:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  advanced to slide 30:  "District Snapshot: Mat-                                                                    
Su  Borough  School  District."   The  school  district  was                                                                    
showing a  14.5 percent  decrease in  their brick-and-mortar                                                                    
ADM and a  45 percent increase in  their correspondence ADM.                                                                    
The district  triggered the hold harmless  provision with an                                                                    
11.56  percent  decrease  in their  school  size  ADM.  They                                                                    
expected  to  receive about  $3.1  million  more than  their                                                                    
FY 21  projected foundation  amount. The  district had  only                                                                    
spent about 4.9  percent of their ESSR I  allocation and did                                                                    
not  receive a  GEER I  allocation. They  expect to  receive                                                                    
about $15.9 million in ESSR II funding.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  reviewed the public  school enrollment  and the                                                                    
funding formula  for Nome Public  Schools on slide  31. They                                                                    
showed  a 9.5  decrease  in their  brick-and-mortar ADM  and                                                                    
about a  318 percent  increase in their  correspondence ADM.                                                                    
The district  triggered the hold harmless  provision with an                                                                    
8.39  percent  decrease  in  their  school  size  ADM.  They                                                                    
expected to  receive about  $323,000 more  than their  FY 21                                                                    
projected foundation  amount. The  district had  spent about                                                                    
13 percent of their ESSER  I allocation and about 45 percent                                                                    
of  their  GEER  I  allocation.  The  district  expected  to                                                                    
receive about  $810,000 in ESSER  II funding. At the  end of                                                                    
FY 20 they reported a  13.29 percent unreserved fund balance                                                                    
in their operating fund. She concluded the presentation.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:23:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  asked  about  additional  funding                                                                    
from the federal government. He  wondered if Ms. Teshner had                                                                    
any recommendations as to how  to appropriate those dollars.                                                                    
He supposed Alaska's  potion would be less  than $1 billion.                                                                    
He thought  consideration of  the timing  of the  release of                                                                    
those funds relative to the  completion of the budget was in                                                                    
order. He asked Ms. Teshner to comment.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner  responded that if  the State of Alaska  were to                                                                    
receive  the  allocation  before  the  end  of  the  regular                                                                    
session,  the administration  would go  through the  regular                                                                    
process  to request  additional  federal  authority. If  the                                                                    
legislature was  not in regular session,  the administration                                                                    
would go through the Legislative  Budget and Audit Committee                                                                    
and  request   the  additional  federal   receipt  authority                                                                    
through  the  Revised   Programs  Legislative  (RPL)  Review                                                                    
Process.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  asked if the  administration would                                                                    
make  a  recommendation  to  the  legislature.  Ms.  Teshner                                                                    
deferred to Ms.  Sanders. Ms. Sanders responded  that if the                                                                    
federal  government passed  an additional  bill, DEED  would                                                                    
allocate  the  funding  in   accordance  with  federal  law.                                                                    
Similar  to  what the  department  did  with the  CARES  Act                                                                    
funding and the  CRRSA Act, it allocated the  funding to the                                                                    
school  districts   based  on  what  the   federal  guidance                                                                    
provided. Ms. Teshner was correct  that the department would                                                                    
appear before the Legislative Budget  and Audit Committee to                                                                    
request the  additional federal receipt authority  if a bill                                                                    
was passed and the legislature was not in session.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:27:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  referred to slide 27  which showed the                                                                    
Fairbanks School District. He  pointed to the required local                                                                    
effort  in the  middle of  the slide.  He clarified  that it                                                                    
showed  the baseline  for the  Fairbanks North  Star Borough                                                                    
was  required to  provide in  education funding.  They might                                                                    
contribute  more than  the amount,  but the  amount was  the                                                                    
minimum required contribution. He  asked if he was accurate.                                                                    
Ms.  Sanders confirmed  that it  was their  required minimum                                                                    
local contribution.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon thought  the amount  was smaller  than                                                                    
what  was  actually  provided.   The  Fairbanks  North  Star                                                                    
Borough   actually  contributed   about   $50  million.   He                                                                    
suggested that if  the minimum was 4 mils,  the maximum must                                                                    
be about  8 mils. He  asked if  he was correct.  Ms. Teshner                                                                    
replied that  the maximum local contribution  was calculated                                                                    
using their  required local contribution plus  25 percent of                                                                    
the basic  need. In other  words, it  was the greater  of 25                                                                    
percent of  prior year basic  need or the  2 mils equivalent                                                                    
of the full and true value of taxable property.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon noted  that the  disparity feature  of                                                                    
school  funding. he  suggested  that even  if the  Fairbanks                                                                    
community  wanted  to  contribute the  maximum  amount,  the                                                                    
disparity formula might push down  the local contribution to                                                                    
avoid  jeopardizing  any  federal funding.  He  thought  the                                                                    
disparity   formula   acted   as   a   ceiling   for   local                                                                    
contributions. He  asked if his statement  was accurate. Ms.                                                                    
Teshner responded in the affirmative.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  appreciated   the  presentation.  He                                                                    
referred to Handout 10. It  stated that given that there was                                                                    
no  single supplement  or supplant  provision in  both CARES                                                                    
Act and CRRSA  Act funding, the state had  to fund education                                                                    
at  FY 17,  FY 18,  or FY  19 levels  in order  to meet  the                                                                    
maintenance of effort requirements  for the ESSER I, GEER I,                                                                    
ESSER II,  and GEER II pots  of money. The state  would have                                                                    
to get a waiver from DEED  or risk paying the money back. He                                                                    
asked if that was Ms. Teshner's interpretation.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner explained that for  the CARES Act funding, in FY                                                                    
20 and FY  21 the state had  to meet the average  of what it                                                                    
spent in  FY 17,  FY 18, and  FY 19.  She reported  that the                                                                    
department had  already submitted  its FY 20  maintenance of                                                                    
effort calculation to the U.S.  Department of Education, and                                                                    
the State  of Alaska had  met the maintenance of  effort for                                                                    
elementary, secondary, and  higher education. The department                                                                    
was also projecting it would  meet the maintenance of effort                                                                    
under the CARES Act for FY 21.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Teshner  continued  that  under   the  CRRSA  Act,  the                                                                    
maintenance of effort was the  proportional amount the state                                                                    
had  spent on  average from  FY 17,  FY 18,  and FY  19. The                                                                    
amount  that  had  been  spent  overall  across  the  entire                                                                    
state's  budget was  what  the  state had  to  meet for  the                                                                    
maintenance of effort calculation for FY 22.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:32:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  was  still  trying  to  get  to  the                                                                    
question of enrollment. It appeared  there was a decrease in                                                                    
the  governor's  proposal  for education  funding  of  about                                                                    
$24 million in  FY 22 due  to a lower enrollment  number. He                                                                    
wondered  how  to know  the  amount  the legislature  should                                                                    
appropriate  with all  of the  current factors  at play.  He                                                                    
wanted to see  that the funding levels  for schools remained                                                                    
healthy. He noted the state's  current fiscal restraints. He                                                                    
indicated  there were  several handouts  in members  packets                                                                    
containing pertinent  information. He  asked if there  was a                                                                    
way for the  department to condense the  information so that                                                                    
it was easier for people  to understand, he would appreciate                                                                    
it.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  continued that  he thought  there was                                                                    
significant funding  already going to school  districts with                                                                    
additional distributions anticipated in  the near future. He                                                                    
returned to  the supplement  versus supplant  provisions and                                                                    
potential unmet needs because the  executive branch would be                                                                    
allocating  much  of  the funding  without  the  legislature                                                                    
being  involved in  the process.  The legislature  was being                                                                    
asked   to  appropriate   its   normal  education   funding,                                                                    
approximately  25 percent  of  the  UGF amount  appropriated                                                                    
every year.  He hoped any future  presentations would create                                                                    
more of a concrete picture.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Teshner commented that maintenance  of effort was a very                                                                    
complicated  issue. The  administration was  looking at  the                                                                    
requirements of  what it knew  so far for FY  22 maintenance                                                                    
of effort under  the CRRSA Act. The state  was in compliance                                                                    
with the CARES Act. The  state had not received any specific                                                                    
guidance from  the federal government on  the maintenance of                                                                    
effort for  FY 22. She was  aware that it would  be based on                                                                    
what the  state actually spent  rather than what was  in the                                                                    
budget. Therefore, if  FY 22 actual numbers  came in higher,                                                                    
it would  be a different number.  She was happy to  keep the                                                                    
committee  informed as  the  department received  additional                                                                    
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  reviewed  the  agenda  for  the  following                                                                    
meeting.  The  subcommittee  for the  University  of  Alaska                                                                    
would be meeting as a committee of the whole.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
HB  69  was   HEARD  and  HELD  in   committee  for  further                                                                    
consideration.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
HB  71  was   HEARD  and  HELD  in   committee  for  further                                                                    
consideration.