Legislature(2021 - 2022)BUTROVICH 205

02/08/2021 09:00 AM Senate EDUCATION

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09:01:41 AM Start
09:02:18 AM Presentation: "fy 2021 Student Enrollment Counts & Covid-19 Federal Relief Funding" by Commissioner Michael Johnson.
10:31:55 AM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: TELECONFERENCED
"FY2021 Student Enrollment Counts & COVID-19
Federal Relief Funding" by Commissioner Michael
Johnson
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
**Streamed live on AKL.tv**
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE EDUCATION STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                        February 8, 2021                                                                                        
                           9:01 a.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Roger Holland, Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Gary Stevens, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator Shelley Hughes                                                                                                          
Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                          
Senator Tom Begich                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
All members present                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATI0N: "FY 2021 STUDENT ENROLLMENT COUNTS & COVID-19                                                                     
FEDERAL RELIEF FUNDING" BY COMMISSIONER MICHAEL JOHNSON                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MICHAEL JOHNSON, Ph.D., Commissioner                                                                                            
Department of Education and Early Development (DEED)                                                                            
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an update on student enrollment and                                                              
federal COVID-19 funds.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
HEIDI TESHNER, Director                                                                                                         
Finance and Support Services                                                                                                    
Department of Education and Early Development (DEED)                                                                            
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided information on student enrollment                                                                
and funding.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LACEY SANDERS, Administrative Service Director                                                                                  
Office of the Governor                                                                                                          
Office of Management and Budget                                                                                                 
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided an  update of the  federal COVID-19                                                             
education funds.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:01:41 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  ROGER   HOLLAND  called  the  Senate   Education  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 9:01  a.m. Present at the  call to                                                               
order were Senators Hughes, Begich,  Micciche, Stevens, and Chair                                                               
Holland.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
^Presentation:  "FY 2021  Student  Enrollment  Counts &  COVID-19                                                               
Federal Relief Funding" by Commissioner Michael Johnson.                                                                        
  Presentation: "FY 2021 Student Enrollment Counts & COVID-19                                                               
    Federal Relief Funding" by Commissioner Michael Johnson.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:02:18 AM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR HOLLAND announced  that this week the  committee will focus                                                               
on  the  funding  and  learning   impacts  of  COVID-19  on  K-12                                                               
education in  Alaska. This topic  is timely and important  as the                                                               
state  navigates  the  pandemic.  His goal  is  to  identify  any                                                               
unresolved issues  that require  immediate attention and  also to                                                               
capture  any positive  changes that  can be  used to  improve the                                                               
learning environment for children.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:03:04 AM                                                                                                                    
MICHAEL  JOHNSON, Ph.D.,  Commissioner,  Department of  Education                                                               
and  Early Development  (DEED), Juneau,  Alaska, stated  that the                                                               
department would  provide information  about this  year's student                                                               
count  and  the  changes  compared   to  last  year  as  well  as                                                               
information  related  to  the  almost  $200  million  in  federal                                                               
education-related COVID-19 relief funds.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON  said that  in  unprecedented  times it  is                                                               
important  to  remind oneself  of  the  destination and  mission,                                                               
which is, "an  excellent education for every  student every day,"                                                               
regardless of  circumstances. Today's hearing is  a reminder that                                                               
even though the circumstances have  been trying, the department's                                                               
goal and destination is still the same.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON   said  as   the  impact  of   COVID-19  is                                                               
identified,  and the  impact  of millions  of  dollars in  relief                                                               
funds, it is  important to have a reminder  of shared priorities,                                                               
which come  from the Alaska  Education Challenge: 1.  Support all                                                               
students to  read at  grade level  by the end  of third  grade 2.                                                               
Increase career, technical, and  culturally relevant education to                                                               
meet student and workforce needs  3. Close the achievement gap by                                                               
ensuring equitable  educational rigor  and resources  4. Prepare,                                                               
attract, and retain effective  education professionals 5. Improve                                                               
the   safety   and   well-being  of   students   through   school                                                               
partnerships with families, communities, and tribes.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON said the  priorities provide a post-pandemic                                                               
pathway for the education system.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON  shared that  DEED has  the good  fortune to                                                               
have two  of the most  experienced finance experts in  the state,                                                               
Heidi  Teshner, Director  of School  Finance and  Facilities, and                                                               
Lacey  Sanders, Director  of  Administrative Services.  Together,                                                               
these  two  handle one  of  the  largest  portions of  the  state                                                               
budget. They are  uniquely equipped and qualified  to provide the                                                               
committee  with both  current and  past budgetary  and enrollment                                                               
context.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:06:10 AM                                                                                                                    
HEIDI   TESHNER,   Director,   Finance  and   Support   Services,                                                               
Department  of Education  and Early  Development (DEED),  Juneau,                                                               
Alaska, said  she will  provide an  overview of  FY2021 statewide                                                               
enrollment  updates and  explain the  foundation payment  process                                                               
and  address  a few  additional  state-funded  programs that  are                                                               
affected by the enrollment counts.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER  said the  legislature  has  provided a  formula  in                                                               
statute to  fund school  operational costs,  known as  the public                                                               
school funding formula and more  commonly known as the foundation                                                               
formula. It  was adopted under SB  36 in 1998 and  implemented in                                                               
1999. It  is defined in AS  14.17. The funding for  each district                                                               
is a combination of state  aid, required local contributions, and                                                               
federal  impact  aid. The  19  Rural  Education Attendance  Areas                                                               
(REAA) do  not have a local  contribution. Furthermore, Southeast                                                               
Islands  School  District receives  solely  state  aid. A  school                                                               
district is  only eligible for  foundation formula  as calculated                                                               
under the formula and set out  in AS 14.17.410. The first step in                                                               
determining  state aid  for school  district  is determining  the                                                               
ADM, the average daily membership, for each school.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:08:20 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGHES  asked how  many times  in the  last 22  years the                                                               
foundation  formula  has been  adjusted  and  when was  the  most                                                               
recent   time.  Through   the   National   Conference  of   State                                                               
Legislators  (NCSL), she  heard that  in other  states it  is not                                                               
uncommon to tweak  the formula every year or  two. Her impression                                                               
is that Alaska doesn't do it as often.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER answered  that she  would  say about  10 times.  She                                                               
doesn't have the exact number in  front of her. It has changed by                                                               
adjusting district cost factors,  the special education intensive                                                               
factor,  and  by increasing  the  correspondence  factor from  80                                                               
percent to the  current 90 percent. She can't  remember the exact                                                               
last update but will get that information.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:09:40 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BEGICH shared that the  Augenblick study was commissioned                                                               
by  the  legislature  in 2015.  The  legislature  under  Co-chair                                                               
MacKinnon on the Finance Committee  requested an audit and review                                                               
for a  quarter million dollars  of the formula by  the Augenblick                                                               
group out of  Colorado. The study concluded the  formula with the                                                               
exception of  changes that were  made in subsequent years  was in                                                               
fairly robust  shape. He could  get copies  of the report  to the                                                               
committee.  Senator MacKinnon  adjusted some  of the  elements of                                                               
the  formula related  to how  the state  reimburses schools  that                                                               
have  fallen below  a certain  number.  He asked  if Ms.  Teshner                                                               
remembered the  law that passed  in either 2017 or  2018. Senator                                                               
MacKinnon  championed adjusting  for  school population  decline.                                                               
That was a direct result of Augenblick.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER  responded  that that  was  statute  addressing  the                                                               
consolidation of schools by district choice.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH said that was  a direct response to the Augenblick                                                               
study  to  correct  what  was  identified as  a  mistake  in  the                                                               
formula. The process is somewhat robust.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:11:32 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE  observed that  the Alaska legislature  lives in                                                               
fear  of  even  considering  readjusting the  BSA  (Base  Student                                                               
Allocation).  Getting a  comprehensive list  of the  changes plus                                                               
the study  would be  helpful for the  legislature as  it analyzes                                                               
the potential path forward.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER  responded   that  she  can  provide   that  to  the                                                               
committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER explained that the ADM  is the number of students who                                                               
are enrolled during the 20-day  school count period that ends the                                                               
fourth Friday  of October.  For the school  year 20-21,  that ran                                                               
from  September 28  to October  23, 2020.  In order  to determine                                                               
state aid,  districts must  submit their  student count  data, or                                                               
their  average daily  membership,  to the  department within  two                                                               
weeks after  the count period  ends, which was November  6, 2020.                                                               
The student data from the count  period is the starting point for                                                               
calculating state aid for school districts.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  displayed the table on  slide 8 as the  FY2021 OASIS                                                               
[Online Alaska School Information System]  update. The data is as                                                               
of  December 18,  2020.  The table  compares  the FY21  projected                                                               
student data and  the actual count data. The  FY22 projected data                                                               
is also  shown and compared to  the FY21 OASIS numbers.  The FY21                                                               
projected data is data that  districts provided to the department                                                               
in  November of  2019.  These  counts were  used  to prepare  the                                                               
governor's  FY21   budget.  That  projected  data   is  used  for                                                               
budgeting purposes only  at the statewide level.  At the November                                                               
18,  2020,  joint  Education Committee  hearing,  the  department                                                               
provided  the joint  committee with  the  FY21 preliminary  data,                                                               
which  was the  unreconciled data  from the  20-day count  period                                                               
that  ended in  October.  That preliminary  data  was subject  to                                                               
change  after  department  review. The  review  process  included                                                               
removing all duplications ensuring  that no student receives more                                                               
than one  average daily  membership count,  and then  the special                                                               
education intensive  reviews. The FY21 OASIS  updated numbers are                                                               
the  result  of  that  review.  The  department  had  over  1,500                                                               
duplicates from  all districts.  About half  of that,  about 768,                                                               
were unique student id numbers  duplicated in the system. That is                                                               
double that of previous years.  The department is still reviewing                                                               
the special education intensive student  count and so there could                                                               
still be changes,  but the ADM numbers being  presented today are                                                               
pretty much  final. The final  dollar amount could be  subject to                                                               
change.  The  FY22  projected data  districts  submitted  to  the                                                               
department in  November 2020 was  used to prepare  the governor's                                                               
FY22 budget.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:16:22 AM                                                                                                                    
MS.  TESHNER said  the  FY21 OASIS  regular  ADM, the  brick-and-                                                               
mortar  students,  decreased 15,352.91,  or  about  a 13  percent                                                               
decline   compared  the   FY  21   projected  data.   FY21  OASIS                                                               
correspondence ADM  increased 13,445.80, a 94.9  percent increase                                                               
over the  FY21 projected  data. The  overall total  ADM decreased                                                               
only  1,907.11, or  1.5 percent  compared to  the FY21  projected                                                               
data. The adjusted  ADM has increased 5,698.09, or  a 2.2 percent                                                               
increase over the FY 21 projected data.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  said that  slide 10 of  the presentation  provides a                                                               
glance at  the factors used  to determine the adjusted  ADM. That                                                               
includes  applying   the  school   size  factor  to   the  count,                                                               
addressing hold harmless, followed  by the district cost factors,                                                               
special needs factor, vocational  and technical education factor,                                                               
special education  intensives, and correspondence ADM.  This will                                                               
be  addressed  later  in the  presentation.  The  adjustment  for                                                               
school  size,  the hold  harmless  provision,  and the  shift  in                                                               
correspondence are the main reasons for the increase in ADM.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
9:18:08 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  BEGICH asked  if  the decline  of  1,907[for total  ADM]                                                               
means  about 2,000  fewer students  being counted.  Some of  that                                                               
comes  from  migration out  of  Alaska.  He  asked if  there  any                                                               
students  who have  slipped  through the  cracks,  are there  any                                                               
missing  students who  are not  in  correspondence or  brick-and-                                                               
mortar schools but haven't left the state.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  replied that  the department did  do an  analysis to                                                               
figure  out  where students  might  have  gone. Unless  they  are                                                               
enrolled  in a  public school,  the department  does not  know if                                                               
they have left the state or  gone to a private homeschool program                                                               
or  other  private school.  The  department  has determined  that                                                               
there  are  more  fractional  ADMs than  in  recent  years.  Four                                                               
student ids  can equal one ADM  if they are each  a quarter time.                                                               
There are  almost 12,000  new Alaska  student ids  assigned since                                                               
last year. A  lot of those are pre-Ks,  kindergarteners and first                                                               
graders. The department doesn't know  how many students have gone                                                               
to a private school or have left the state.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:20:20 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGHES asked  if there is any process as  students exit a                                                               
school to ask where they are headed.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER replied  that if students transfer  to another school                                                               
there is transfer paperwork that  the exiting school sends to the                                                               
new school district. She would assume  that is the same for going                                                               
to a private  school from a public school, but  she does not know                                                               
that for a fact. That could be  a good question to ask the school                                                               
districts when they are in committee later this week.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:21:24 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  STEVENS pointed  out that  this is  an enormous  problem                                                               
that will have  major repercussions for school  districts and the                                                               
department.  He  has  heard   superintendents  talk  about  ghost                                                               
students. He has heard his  grandchildren talk about students who                                                               
were in their  online classes who just disappeared.  It should be                                                               
obvious  to everyone  that this  is an  enormous problem,  all of                                                               
these ghost  students and  what will  the state  do to  make sure                                                               
that this is not a lost year for them.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:22:11 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MICCICHE shared  that  he is  trying  to understand  the                                                               
adjusted  ADM. The  hold harmless  provision for  a five  percent                                                               
[decrease in  enrollment] or more  is 75 percent the  first year.                                                               
He asked if  the impacts of COVID were to  continue throughout FY                                                               
21,  and schools  dropped down  to the  50 percent,  whether this                                                               
bottom line number is going to look much different.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER answered  that slide  9 will  walk through  the hold                                                               
harmless  provision but,  yes, if  the trends  were to  continue,                                                               
that line  for the  projected FY  22 could  change. That  is also                                                               
subject to change  based on the actual count  that the department                                                               
will get in November of 2021.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  asked if she  has calculated that if  the trend                                                               
continues. He  asked if she  has some  analysis to show  what the                                                               
funding difference  may look  like once schools  get into  the 50                                                               
percent for the second year.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  responded that department hasn't  done any projected                                                               
comparison other  than the projected  data on slide  8. Districts                                                               
project whether  students will come back  to the brick-and-mortar                                                               
schools or  stay in  correspondence. If  students stay  below the                                                               
base year  for hold harmless,  that 50 percent  calculation would                                                               
already be reflected in the projected number.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
9:24:24 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGHES  clarified that she wants  to be sure that  she is                                                               
correct in thinking that if  10 students were in brick-and-mortar                                                               
schools and then they went  to public correspondence schools, the                                                               
schools are getting  the 90 percent [correspondence]  rate and if                                                               
the district is held harmless for  the regular ADM, the state, in                                                               
a sense,  is paying for  those students  twice, once at  the full                                                               
rate and once at the 90 percent rate.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER  answered  that  that  is  correct.  Districts  have                                                               
experienced that.  For example,  Mat-Su lost  kids in  the brick-                                                               
and-mortar schools  who went to  the Mat-Su Central  School. That                                                               
triggered  hold harmless  and  Mat-Su also  gets  paid for  those                                                               
students through the correspondence count.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER addressed  the hold harmless provision  with slide 9.                                                               
The provision was  enacted in 2008 under HB 273.  It is for those                                                               
districts experiencing a reduction in their ADM for brick-and-                                                                  
mortar   schools  after   ADM  is   adjusted  for   school  size.                                                               
Eligibility is determined after the district's adjusted-for-                                                                    
school-size ADM is calculated and  totaled for all schools. It is                                                               
a  district-wide total.  The  sum total  of  the district's  ADM,                                                               
adjusted for school size, is  compared to the prior fiscal year's                                                               
ADM, adjusted  for school size, to  determine if a decrease  of 5                                                               
percent or greater  has occurred. If the answer is  yes, then the                                                               
prior fiscal  year is  looked at  as the base  year for  the next                                                               
three years.  The new  school size,  adjusted for  hold harmless,                                                               
continues  through   the  formula  adjustments,  which   will  be                                                               
addressed on  the next  slide. This  results in  approximately 75                                                               
percent  of the  basic  need calculation  being  restored in  the                                                               
first year.  The hold harmless  provision is available  to school                                                               
districts over  a three-year  step-down of  75 percent  the first                                                               
year, 50  percent the second  year, and  25 percent in  the final                                                               
year, provided that the  adjusted-for-school-size ADM stays below                                                               
that  established base  year.  This  three-year step-down  allows                                                               
time for districts to adjust  to the decreased funding that comes                                                               
with  the  decrease  in  their   brick-and-mortar  ADM.  If  hold                                                               
harmless is  triggered in  21 and then  districts have  another 5                                                               
percent decrease in FY22, districts  have a choice to continue to                                                               
the 50 percent  or they can restart their hold  harmless. It is a                                                               
case-by-case situation.  Districts usually  choose the  higher of                                                               
the two amounts.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:27:52 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE asked  about determining the base  year if there                                                               
is another 5 percent decrease.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER answered  that if FY 20 is the  base year, if another                                                               
5 percent  decrease occurs  in FY22, the  base year  becomes FY21                                                               
and the district can start the  75 percent in FY22 or continue on                                                               
with the 50 percent, keeping FY 20 as the base year.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER said  that  slide  10 provides  the  outline of  the                                                               
formula. After  the student  data is reported,  the ADM  for each                                                               
school is calculated  by applying the school size  factor to that                                                               
count  according  to the  table  in  AS  14.17.410 and  then  the                                                               
product of that calculation is then  used as a factor in the next                                                               
step  of the  formula.  All in  all, AS  14.17.410  sets out  the                                                               
remaining  steps. The  graph on  this slide  shows the  statutory                                                               
reference  for each  factor for  quick reference.  The tables  on                                                               
slide 10  and slide 11  give an overview  of the formula  and the                                                               
multipliers that  are used  to determine state  aid. Slide  10 is                                                               
how to  get to the district  adjusted ADM. Slide 11  finishes the                                                               
formula and shows the funding  side. The district adjusted ADM is                                                               
multiplied  by  the  base  student  allocation  (BSA),  which  is                                                               
$5,930,  and that  is the  basic need.  Three components  pay for                                                               
basic need,  required local contribution,  impact aid,  and state                                                               
aid, plus quality  schools. That is the  total state entitlement.                                                               
The document  Public School Funding  Program Overview that  is on                                                               
the DEED website  explains the calculations in  more detail. That                                                               
could be provided to the committee.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:31:31 AM                                                                                                                    
MS. TESHNER noted that she wanted  to address the funding side of                                                               
slide  12, FY2021  Statewide  Enrollment  Comparison. The  FY2021                                                               
OASIS updated  numbers, compared  to the FY21  projected numbers,                                                               
show a  net increase of $25  million, a 2 percent  increase. This                                                               
is a  $25 million  increase over  the current  year's [projected]                                                               
budget. Within  these numbers, 25 school  districts are estimated                                                               
to  receive  increased  state  aid. That  total  is  about  $54.5                                                               
million.  And 29  school districts  will receive  decreased state                                                               
aid,  totaling about  $29.4 million.  The difference  is the  $25                                                               
million net  increase. FY21 is  $38,151.6 million or  3.1 percent                                                               
more  than what  was paid  out  last year  [FY2020 Actual].  With                                                               
those  numbers, thirty-five  school  districts  are estimated  to                                                               
receive increased state aid totaling  about $56.1 million and the                                                               
remaining 19 school districts are  estimated to receive decreased                                                               
state aid, about  $21.3 million less. Later slides  take a closer                                                               
look at  the ADM and  foundation counts  as well as  the COVID-19                                                               
federal relief  funds and  the FY21  operating fund  balance data                                                               
for the  11 school districts  the committee will hear  from later                                                               
in the week.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGHES  clarified that the  increase of $38  million does                                                               
not include federal COVID dollars coming to the districts.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  answered that  is correct. It  is just  the increase                                                               
from student enrollment.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER said  that slide  13,  Foundation Payments  Process,                                                               
gives  an  overview  of  how   the  payments  are  processed.  AS                                                               
14.17.610(a) outlines  that process. Payments are  processed on a                                                               
monthly basis. Payments  for the first nine months  of the fiscal                                                               
year are calculated based on  the prior fiscal year's foundation.                                                               
So, for  the first nine  months of  FY21, July through  March are                                                               
paid on  the final FY20  foundation. The remaining  three months,                                                               
April, May, and June, are recalculated  and trued up based on the                                                               
finalized, current year foundation counts.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE asked  about  the numbers  for  the last  three                                                               
payments.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER replied  that the department has been  paying on FY20                                                               
actuals. The department will true  up the $25 million increase in                                                               
the April, May, and June payments.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER explained  that  slide  14, Additional  State-Funded                                                               
Formula Programs,  addresses the  other state programs  that will                                                               
also be affected by the  school year 2020-2021 student enrollment                                                               
data.  Those include  pupil  transportation  and the  residential                                                               
schools program.  The pupil  transportation grant  is based  on a                                                               
statutory formula  in AS  14.09.010. A  district's ADM,  less the                                                               
correspondence  students ADM,  is multiplied  by the  per student                                                               
amount set out in statute.  The FY21 appropriation was almost $77                                                               
million.  The estimated  FY21  grants is  estimated  to be  about                                                               
$65.3 million,  so a  decrease of $11.65  million, or  15 percent                                                               
decrease,  over  the prior  year.  Fewer  students in  brick-and-                                                               
mortar  buildings  means fewer  dollars  to  districts for  their                                                               
student transportation programs.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:38:12 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BEGICH shared that a bus  rate is paid that is figured as                                                               
a  cost  factor  related  to   minimum  wage.  He  has  generally                                                               
supported a minimum  wage increase, but it would  have a dramatic                                                               
impact  on the  bus wages.  He asked  if increasing  minimum wage                                                               
would have an impact on this.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  answered that  would be at  the district  level. The                                                               
department's grant amount won't  change unless statute is changed                                                               
to reflect  that. When a  district renews its contract,  it would                                                               
have  to  apply the  minimum  wage  factor.  If  it is  a  school                                                               
district-operated program, it would be  an immediate increase. It                                                               
would  be  a hit  to  a  district's transportation  program.  The                                                               
department grant  level would continue  as is with  no adjustment                                                               
unless a statute is amended.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH noted the  possibility of unintended consequences.                                                               
The legislature should  be aware of this. Usually  a contract for                                                               
a bus  driver is a factor  of whatever the existing  minimum wage                                                               
is and the  Alaska minimum wage is driven by  the federal minimum                                                               
wage to some degree. It is something to be aware of.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER  explained  that  the  residential  schools  program                                                               
funding is also  determined by a statutory formula set  out in AS                                                               
14.16.200. There  is a residential  stipend, a per  pupil monthly                                                               
stipend that is multiplied by  nine months and then multiplied by                                                               
the  actual student  count. In  addition, there  is reimbursement                                                               
for one round-trip transportation per  student, which must be the                                                               
least  expensive means  between the  student's community  and the                                                               
school. For  FY21, the appropriation for  the residential schools                                                               
program was  about $8,275,700. The  estimated actual for  FY21 is                                                               
$2,363,600,  a decrease  of  $5.9  million or  71  percent. In  a                                                               
normal year, nine school districts  operate 10 approved programs.                                                               
This year only four residential  schools were operating, but at a                                                               
reduced capacity. Galena,  which is a year-round  program, has 47                                                               
students attending but  is approved for up to 210,  which is a 78                                                               
percent decrease.  Lower Yukon has  a variable term  program with                                                               
42 students  attending. They are approved  for up to 50,  so a 16                                                               
percent  decrease. Nenana  has a  year-round program  and has  49                                                               
students attending. They are approved  for up to 100 students, so                                                               
a 51  percent decrease.  Northwest Arctic,  which has  a variable                                                               
and year-long program,  has 8 students attending  and is approved                                                               
for 40, so an 80 percent decrease.  All of this is less money for                                                               
that program.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE asked,  after the  hold harmless  breakdown and                                                               
lack  of  protection  with   student  transport  and  residential                                                               
programs, what the funding differences  look like for each of the                                                               
districts. That  would be useful  information as  the legislature                                                               
evaluates a funding  path forward this year. It would  be nice to                                                               
understand  the  impact  on individual  districts,  before  COVID                                                               
relief.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER replied that can be provided to the committee.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
9:43:43 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BEGICH  observed that that  number is an  anomaly related                                                               
to  the COVID-19  outbreak and  people not  going to  the schools                                                               
because of  safety issues. He  asked Ms. Teshner if  she expected                                                               
this  anomaly to  continue if  the COVID-19  pandemic is  largely                                                               
under control.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER responded that if the  trend is that students will go                                                               
back  to brick-and-mortar  schools, then,  yes, this  an anomaly.                                                               
The  decrease in  student transportation  would  only occur  this                                                               
year.  The  same thing  is  resolved  and  schools open  to  full                                                               
capacity  the residential  schools would  go back  to the  normal                                                               
levels.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGHES noted that because  of COVID-19 only 30 percent of                                                               
what  was appropriated  for residential  schools  was spent.  She                                                               
would  have  thought the  same  thing  would  be true  for  pupil                                                               
transportation  because  so  many brick-and-mortar  schools  were                                                               
closed. She  asked if  contracts for bus  drivers were  paid even                                                               
though  schools   were  closed   and  students  were   not  being                                                               
transported. She is surprised that  the amount is $65 million out                                                               
of  $76 [million]  when  her understanding  is  that most  school                                                               
districts had brick-and-mortar schools closed.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER replied that the  pupil transportation grant is based                                                               
on  a statutory  formula. Whether  schools are  open or  not, the                                                               
department, assuming there is  a legislative appropriation, would                                                               
pay  based on  that statute,  which is  brick-and-mortar students                                                               
multiplied by  the per student  cost. Districts still  have pupil                                                               
transportation costs,  even if they  are not  running. Typically,                                                               
pupil transportation contracts have a  clause to pay at a reduced                                                               
rate  if buses  are not  running. Each  district has  a different                                                               
contract. If  it is a district-run  pupil transportation program,                                                               
it  would be  different. It  is entirely  up to  the district  to                                                               
choose to pay their bus  drivers, which the department encourages                                                               
them to do, assuming schools are open.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:47:06 AM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR HUGHES observed that  the amount calculated automatically                                                               
goes to school districts and  whether a school district is paying                                                               
a diminished  rate is up  to each school.  She asked if  a school                                                               
that is not  paying is allowed to use  those transportation funds                                                               
for other purposes.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER answered  yes, unfortunately they could  do that. The                                                               
department  would pay  for the  pupil transportation  program and                                                               
districts would  reflect that in  their special revenue  fund for                                                               
the  pupil transportation  program.  They would  need  to show  a                                                               
transfer out  to another  fund. The department  will not  see the                                                               
specific purchase  if it is  moved to  the operating fund  but it                                                               
would show  that the  money was  removed from  the transportation                                                               
fund into the operating fund.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGHES asked if the department  knows how much of the $65                                                               
million was not used for pupil transportation.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER answered  that the  department won't  know how  much                                                               
money was transferred out of  pupil transportation funds until it                                                               
receives the districts' audit in November of 2021.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR HOLLAND  commented that if  he understands  correctly, some                                                               
schools may  have lost enrollment  but stayed open and  still had                                                               
to run the same routes.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  responded that  is correct.  Some districts  were up                                                               
and running  with reduced ridership,  but the route costs  do not                                                               
change  in that  circumstance. She  then turned  the presentation                                                               
over to Ms. Sanders.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:49:58 AM                                                                                                                    
LACEY  SANDERS, Administrative  Service Director,  Office of  the                                                               
Governor, Office of Management and  Budget, Juneau, Alaska, began                                                               
with  slide 16,  saying  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,  divided among  the Elementary  and Secondary                                                               
School  Emergency  Relief Fund  (ESSER  I  Fund), the  Governor's                                                               
Emergency Education  Relief Fund  (GEER I  Fund), and  the Higher                                                               
Education Emergency  Relief Fund. The University  of Alaska would                                                               
be the appropriate body to speak to the higher education fund.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SANDERS said  that slide  17  showed the  state of  Alaska's                                                               
allocation for ESSER  I and GEER I. The allocation  for ESSER was                                                               
$38.4 million,  divided into two  separate parts;  ninety percent                                                               
went to Local Education Agencies  (school districts) and the rest                                                               
went to the State Education  Agency (DEED). School districts have                                                               
until September  30, 2022, to  obligate the funds. As  of January                                                               
29,  2021, school  districts  requested  reimbursement for  $11.3                                                               
million  and  $22.8  million has  been  encumbered  for  approved                                                               
school districts  budgets based  on an approved  application. The                                                               
department  is working  on budget  requests  for FY  21 and  will                                                               
continue until  FY 22 and  FY 23.  DEED received $3.8  million to                                                               
grant  award or  contracts to  address emergency  needs resulting                                                               
from the COVID-19  pandemic. The total allocation for  GEER I was                                                               
$6.5 million. The  purpose is to provide  emergency assistance as                                                               
a result of the COVID-19  pandemic. This funding is available for                                                               
the governor  to allocate  at his discretion,  which is  shown in                                                               
slide 17.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS  said that slide  18 summarizes  Coronavirus Response                                                               
and  Relief Supplemental  Appropriations (CRRSA)  Act, which  was                                                               
signed into law December 27,  2020. It deposited $82 billion into                                                               
the Education Stabilization Fund.  Approximately $4.1 billion was                                                               
for the  GEER II  Fund. Approximately $54.3  billion was  for the                                                               
ESSER II  Fund. Approximately  $21.7 billion  was for  the Higher                                                               
Education Emergency  Relief Fund.  These funds are  accounted for                                                               
differently and are  available for different uses  and periods of                                                               
availability.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH recalled that CARES  Act funding is not allowed to                                                               
supplant funding,  but CRRSA does  allow that. He asked  for more                                                               
detail about supplementing vs. supplanting.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SANDERS  answered  that  he is  correct.  CRRSA  allows  for                                                               
maximum flexibility. Since  she is not an expert  on supplant vs.                                                               
supplement, she  did not want to  speak too broadly to  that. She                                                               
offered to follow up with additional information.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS displayed  the state of Alaska's ESSER  II funding on                                                               
slide 19.  The total state  ESSER II funding was  $159.7 million.                                                               
The largest  allocation, $143.7 million, went  to local education                                                               
agencies   (school  districts).   School  districts   have  until                                                               
September 30, 2023, to obligate the  funds, which may be used for                                                               
expenditures  dating  back  to  March  2020.  The  department  is                                                               
working  on  applications  and   anticipating  that  it  will  be                                                               
available  to   school  districts  in  mid-February.   The  state                                                               
education agency  received $15.2 million  to award for  grants or                                                               
contracts. This  funding is also available  through September 30,                                                               
2023.  ESSER II  has  an expanded  list  of allowable  activities                                                               
compared  to the  CARES Act,  including addressing  learning loss                                                               
among students,  summer programming, school facility  repairs and                                                               
improvements  to  reduce  the risk  of  virus  transmission,  and                                                               
improvement of air quality in school facilities.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SANDERS noted  that during  a Legislative  Budget and  Audit                                                               
meeting on  January 18, 2021,  several legislators  had questions                                                               
about  water  system  upgrades and  investments  in  Internet  or                                                               
broadband  infrastructure.  Federal  guidance  does  provide  the                                                               
following   allowances  on   this   money.   For  broadband   and                                                               
infrastructure,  ESSER  II   allows  for  purchasing  educational                                                               
technology,  including software,  hardware, and  connectivity for                                                               
students who are  served by the local education  agency that aids                                                               
in the  regular and  substantive educational  interaction between                                                               
students   and   classroom  instructors,   including   low-income                                                               
students  and  children  with  disabilities,  which  may  include                                                               
assistive technology,  adaptive equipment,  as well  as planning,                                                               
coordinating,  and   implementing  activities   during  long-term                                                               
closures,  including  providing   meals  for  eligible  students,                                                               
providing  technology  for  online  learning  for  all  students,                                                               
providing guidance  for carrying out requirements  under IDEA and                                                               
ensuring other  educational services can continue  to be provided                                                               
consistent  with  all  federal, state,  and  local  requirements.                                                               
Regarding water system upgrades,  the federal guidance does allow                                                               
for   school  facility   repairs  and   improvements  to   enable                                                               
operations of  school to  reduce the  risk of  virus transmission                                                               
and  exposure to  environmental  health hazards,  and to  support                                                               
student health needs.  School districts can determine  how to the                                                               
funding  will   be  used.  The  department   reviews  the  school                                                               
districts'  proposed  plans  and requests  for  reimbursement  to                                                               
ensure that they are for  allowable uses. DEED assists all school                                                               
districts  with  determining  allowable  uses  based  on  federal                                                               
guidance.  The  department provides  FAQs  and  documents on  its                                                               
website to allow all districts to receive the same response.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  BEGICH observed  that for  years, the  major maintenance                                                               
list for school  facilities have included HVAC  systems and those                                                               
types  of  things. That  obviously  preceded  COVID-19 but  would                                                               
clearly   be  impacted   by  COVID-19.   He  asked   whether  the                                                               
improvement  of  HVAC  systems   would  be  eligible  under  this                                                               
funding.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SANDERS  replied  that  as  long as  they  are  meeting  the                                                               
guidance,  which   says  that  to   reduce  the  risk   of  virus                                                               
transmission  and  exposure   to  environmental  health  hazards.                                                               
School  districts  decide  how  the  funds  will  be  spent.  The                                                               
department cannot tell  districts what to do, but it  can help to                                                               
find allowable uses for that funding.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:01:00 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR STEVENS opined that the  summer programming is crucial to                                                               
catch   students  who   have  fallen   through  the   cracks.  He                                                               
understands that it is up to  the districts how to use the money,                                                               
but he  is concerned about  DEED's involvement in that.  He asked                                                               
if  the  department  will  need  additional  staff  and  be  make                                                               
recommendations, or leave  it totally in the hands  of the school                                                               
districts.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS  replied school districts  do decide how  the funding                                                               
that  comes  to the  district  will  be  utilized and  the  state                                                               
department of education will address  learning loss and will work                                                               
on ways to meet the summer learning loss as well.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEVENS characterized that as  a crucial issue that needs                                                               
direct department  involvement. He  asked for the  legislature to                                                               
be kept abreast  and informed about how the  department is trying                                                               
to coordinate summer programs throughout the state.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS responded absolutely.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:02:37 AM                                                                                                                   
MS. SANDERS said that slide 20  show the state's GEER II funding,                                                               
which is just under $8.2 million  and broken into two pieces. The                                                               
first is the governor's supplemental  allocation of $2.8 million.                                                               
The  uses  are  similar  for GEER  I.  They  include  preventing,                                                               
preparing  for,  and responding  to  COVID-19.  The governor  has                                                               
discretion  for  awarding  the   funding  and  has  not  provided                                                               
guidance at this  time. The second piece is a  new provision, the                                                               
Emergency Assistance  for Non-Public Schools, with  an allocation                                                               
of  $5.4  million.  This  funding will  be  award  to  non-public                                                               
schools in  partnership with  the DEED.  The application  for the                                                               
funding will be  available by the deadline of  February 12, 2021.                                                               
Non-public schools are not required  to register with DEED, which                                                               
makes it  difficult to provide  a comprehensive list  of eligible                                                               
schools. The  committee has  a handout which  does list  the non-                                                               
public  schools  that  have  been   identified  in  Alaska.  DEED                                                               
conducted an  extensive search. There may  be additional eligible                                                               
schools identified.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SANDERS displayed  graphs  on slide  21  of Total  Education                                                               
Stabilization Funds.  One graph shows  ESSER and the  other shows                                                               
GEER. The committee has several  documents showing details of the                                                               
CARES  and  CRRSA  funding  and   total  expenditures  by  school                                                               
districts.  Two additional  handouts provide  a deeper  dive into                                                               
how school districts are spending their funds.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH asked  about the GEER II money shown  on slide 20.                                                               
Ms. Sanders  had noted that  the governor has not  determined how                                                               
to  use the  $2.8 million  in supplemental  funding. He  asked if                                                               
there is  a general idea of  how that will be  used. He clarified                                                               
that Ms.  Sanders had said  the use  will be consistent  with the                                                               
governor's state of the state address.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS  responded that that  was in reference to  the summer                                                               
school  program. The  department has  not received  guidance. The                                                               
governor has  a longer  period, perhaps a  year, to  obligate and                                                               
award that funding. It is just too soon to say.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:07:01 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR BEGICH requested the  commissioner and department provide                                                               
that information to the committee when it is available.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS affirmed that they will.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:07:26 AM                                                                                                                   
MS. SANDERS  reviewed Additional  CARES Act Allocations  on slide                                                               
22. DEED  received other funding allocations  for child nutrition                                                               
programs, Libraries, Archives, and  Museums, and the Alaska State                                                               
Council on the Arts.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STEVENS shared  that that  he is  concerned that  summer                                                               
school is only a few months  away. That could be the harbinger of                                                               
success or failure for students.  Many students have disappeared.                                                               
It  is  essential  that  they have  the  opportunity  for  summer                                                               
school. He has no concerns  about the larger districts being able                                                               
to handle that. They are making  plans now. He is concerned about                                                               
the  smaller  districts and  how  they  will prepare  for  summer                                                               
programming. He  would like to  know what the department  will do                                                               
to  make that  the smaller  districts are  prepared and  can have                                                               
successful  summer  school programs.  He  will  be watching  that                                                               
carefully.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. SANDERS deferred to the commissioner to respond.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
10:10:45 AM                                                                                                                   
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON  replied  that   the  department  has  been                                                               
thinking about it  and preparing, even before it  knew this other                                                               
round of money  was coming. The school improvement  team has been                                                               
working on how  to help districts, even with "summer  school in a                                                               
box" that  would include recommended curriculum,  scheduling, and                                                               
a  checklist  to prepare.  Some  districts  may be  undergoing  a                                                               
transition in leadership, so the  department wants to be there to                                                               
support  students. Other  districts  may need  less support.  The                                                               
department is  actively working on that  and readying information                                                               
and  resources to  send to  districts.  The comprehensive  center                                                               
through  SERRC  [Alaska's  Educational Service  Agency]  and  the                                                               
Alaska Staff  Development Network  are hosting webinars  on that.                                                               
The department will be supporting districts in the coming weeks.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STEVENS shared  that he  had every  confidence that  the                                                               
commissioner was preparing for that.  There are only a few months                                                               
left. He asked  the commissioner to keep  the committee informed,                                                               
especially  about  the  department   is  reaching  those  smaller                                                               
districts.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BEGICH asked if DEED has  done any research on the impact                                                               
of the  receipt and expenditure  of federal dollars if  the state                                                               
is not under an emergency order.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:13:29 AM                                                                                                                   
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON answered  that he can ask  the Department of                                                               
Law.  The  department  has  asked some  of  those  questions.  As                                                               
everyone knows, even  more money is almost  certainly coming from                                                               
the federal  government, probably even  more support than  was in                                                               
the  last CARES  package. He  is not  aware of  any hindrance  to                                                               
districts receiving  money based  on the declaration.  What could                                                               
be an issue  is that last year the governor  allowed districts to                                                               
carryover  more  than  10  percent   of  their  funding.  As  the                                                               
committee heard, the  CARES Act money is  available over multiple                                                               
years.  Commissioner Johnson  will strongly  recommend that  that                                                               
happen  again. The  governor can  only do  that under  a disaster                                                               
declaration;  otherwise,  the  legislature   will  have  to  pass                                                               
statute to  allow districts  to do that.  DEED applied  for every                                                               
waiver possible for districts to  carry over federal money, which                                                               
many did.  The only impact that  he knows of is  the inability to                                                               
carry over 10  percent, which many districts would need  to do to                                                               
get the maximum benefit out of the money.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER  went on to  District Snapshots, starting  with slide                                                               
23. The  slides give  a closer  look for  the ADM  and foundation                                                               
formula and balance  funds, as well as  federal COVID-19 funding,                                                               
for the  11 districts that  will come before the  committee later                                                               
this week. There will be  10 superintendents because one oversees                                                               
two districts.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. TESHNER said  she would not go over all  the slides but would                                                               
explain slide 24  about the Aleutian Region  School District. She                                                               
explained the  top table layout is  the same as in  slide 12, for                                                               
the statewide  data, but  this is just  for the  district listed.                                                               
The  left-hand side  table  at  the bottom  shows  the CARES  Act                                                               
allocations and expenditures  as of January 28, 2021,  as well as                                                               
for the  CRSSA Act. School  districts have not received  or spent                                                               
CRSSA  money yet.  The Aleutian  Region does  not accept  Title I                                                               
funds, so  it does not  qualify for  a CRSSA allocation,  but the                                                               
department  has   given  additional   funding  out   the  state's                                                               
reservation funds. This is also  true for the Pelican and Skagway                                                               
districts,  so  these  districts  do have  additional  money  for                                                               
COVID-19 expenditures.  The lower right-hand table  is the FY2020                                                               
Operating  Fund  Balance, broken  out  between  the reserved  and                                                               
unreserved  portions. As  the commissioner  stated, the  governor                                                               
waived the statute  to allow districts to carryover  more than 10                                                               
percent of their  ending unreserved fund balance  for FY2020. Not                                                               
all districts had enough to go  over the 10 percent. In total, 26                                                               
districts  had  enough unreserved  fund  balance  from FY2020  to                                                               
carry over  into FY2021. That  is the layout  for each of  the 11                                                               
districts shown on the slides.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  noted that the CRSSA  funding application opens                                                               
February  15.  These  slides  do not  give  a  complete  snapshot                                                               
considering  that  there is  almost  $144  million that  will  be                                                               
available through  CRSSA. He asked if  she has any idea  what the                                                               
level of  interest is and  how that  will affect the  bottom line                                                               
for individual districts.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  TESHNER clarified  that  the department  does  not know  how                                                               
districts  want  to spend  their  money  because the  application                                                               
period is not  open. It could be assumed that  it will be similar                                                               
to how they spent CARES funds, but it is up to the districts.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE  replied that  it  is  just  that if  the  $144                                                               
million is applied somewhat similarly  to other allocations, that                                                               
that  will   change  the  bottom  line   significantly  for  each                                                               
district. Many legislators  and folks in the  community could not                                                               
believe that  districts would  ask for a  hold harmless  when the                                                               
population they  are serving was dramatically  reduced because of                                                               
COVID.  However, people  are  not aware  that  the hold  harmless                                                               
provision  is  law. He  is  trying  to  bring together  what  the                                                               
ultimate bottom lines may look  like for the various district and                                                               
make constituents aware that hold  harmless is not something that                                                               
is being  asked for this year.  Statute would have to  be changed                                                               
for  the districts  not to  be held  harmless on  the effects  of                                                               
COVID and the reduced ADM.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:22:56 AM                                                                                                                   
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON   clarified  the  question.   For  example,                                                               
Aleutian Region slide does not  show the second CARES Act because                                                               
it doesn't  get Title I money.  The department made up  for that.                                                               
On  slide 24,  the Bering  Strait snapshot  does reflect  what it                                                               
will get out  of the $143 million, which is  $5.1 million for the                                                               
CRSSA Act. The  slides and committee handouts  have the breakdown                                                               
of what districts are getting for  CRSSA. The state does not know                                                               
the exact  amount for the  third package that may  pass Congress.                                                               
The hold harmless provision is  in statute. That has been applied                                                               
and used  in years  before the  pandemic. That  is not  a request                                                               
outside of  long-standing practice.  When he  was superintendent,                                                               
his district  fell into  a hold harmless  scenario and  used that                                                               
for  over four  years  as  a gradual  stepdown  in funding.  Some                                                               
districts  qualify for  hold harmless.  When  the federal  relief                                                               
funding is added, then the situation  can be looked at across the                                                               
board to see the overall  impact for districts. The department is                                                               
still analyzing it.  There are transportation and  other funds to                                                               
factor  in.  The executive  director  of  the Alaska  Council  of                                                               
School Administrators,  Lisa Parady, sent  a letter asking  for a                                                               
floor  based on  FY19  projections  and no  ceiling  or limit  to                                                               
funding.  Based on  the department's  initial  analysis, all  but                                                               
seven districts are at or  above that floor with operating funds.                                                               
The  department  continues to  analyze  that  and work  with  the                                                               
superintendents' association to determine the  impact of the past                                                               
year.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEVENS asked  the commissioner to clarify  the impact on                                                               
education if  a disaster  declaration is not  in place.  He asked                                                               
how important it is if districts could not carryover funds.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON  answered that  it would vary  by districts.                                                               
He  would venture  to say  that it  would be  very impactful.  If                                                               
there is  another potential large CARES  package with flexibility                                                               
about how  and when to spend  the money, it is  important to give                                                               
districts  the   flexibility  to  manage  resources   to  benefit                                                               
students for  the next  few years.  That is  the intent  of these                                                               
relief packages.  It does address immediate  years but recognizes                                                               
the impact going forward. By  allowing district to waive that, it                                                               
gives  them  flexibility  to  manage  these  funds  in  the  most                                                               
efficient  and effective  ways  possible.  Districts are  already                                                               
asking if  that will  be available  as they  make plans.  When he                                                               
answered the  question earlier, his  response was focused  on the                                                               
federal funds. If  there are negative impacts from the  lack of a                                                               
disaster  declaration  in  other   areas,  such  as  vaccines  or                                                               
testing,  it   all  contributes  to  getting   schools  reopened.                                                               
Although  it is  not directly  an impact  for his  department and                                                               
doesn't  affect the  funding, it  could impact  schools districts                                                               
depending on the municipality.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:28:22 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR   STEVENS   said   he  believes   any   information   the                                                               
commissioner could provide  on the loss of  the declaration would                                                               
be crucial.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR HUGHES  said that if  the emergency  disaster declaration                                                               
were  not extended,  the  legislature could  fix  the 10  percent                                                               
carryover    statutorily.   When    the   commissioner    was   a                                                               
superintendent, hold harmless came into  play, but it is atypical                                                               
now  because the  population in  a community  is not  necessarily                                                               
shrinking because  students are  moving from  brick-and-mortar to                                                               
correspondence.  In the  commissioner's  situation, the  district                                                               
was probably losing  students and not paying  for students twice,                                                               
as  they are  now with  the hold  harmless provision  and the  90                                                               
percent  rate   for  correspondence   students.  She   asked  the                                                               
commissioner if he would agree.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER JOHNSON  answered that when he  was a superintendent                                                               
and hold  harmless came into  play, it was  because of a  drop in                                                               
enrollment because of a drop  of population in the community. The                                                               
hold harmless  statute did not  conceive of a situation  like the                                                               
state is in  now. It is not necessarily a  drop in population but                                                               
a change  in enrollment.  Some students have  gone from  a brick-                                                               
and-mortar program to a correspondence  program or they have left                                                               
a  district  and  enrolled  in  a  correspondence  program  in  a                                                               
different district.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  JOHNSON concluded  by stating  that the  department                                                               
appreciated the opportunity to be  in front of the committee that                                                               
day and he appreciated the  committee giving school districts the                                                               
opportunity to present later in the week.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:31:55 AM                                                                                                                   
There being no further business to come before the committee,                                                                   
Chair Holland adjourned the Senate Education Standing Committee                                                                 
at 10:31 a.m.