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Harriet Drummond's avatar

Incredibly sad to hear of Fairbanks leaders unwilling to at least attempt to properly fund education! On the other hand it sounds like an increase in the BSA of at least $500 is likely to come out of the legislature. FNSBSD’s adjusted ADM is in the neighborhood of 25,000 which would result in roughly $12.5 million in additional state funding. It remains to be seen whether that BSA increase will be permanent or “one time.”

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Doug Crevensten's avatar

Hello Kuba - I think its misinformed to say the borough leaders do not support local education just because they are reluctant to fund it at a higher level each year. The biggest factor driving the education funding is school enrollment, which has been falling for a number of years and will continue to fall. The response from District leaders needs to focus on raising revenue and cutting costs rather than the easy (lazy, even) ask for exactly what came before plus inflation.

Raising Revenue: Recapture market share from the homeschools that enrolled hundreds of our students during the pandemic, many of whom never came back to us. The established homeschools were able to ramp up quickly because the model, systems and infrastructure were there and they could add teachers fast to increase capacity. Yukon Koyukuk School district's Raven homeschool (one of the best, if not the best, homeschools in the State) went from 1,689 students as of October 1, 2018 r to 2,707 as of October 1, 2022. Not all of Raven's gain was from FNSBSD students, of course. But given, in my opinion, the District's timorous outreach and lackluster program offerings, the other homeschools ate our lunch. And continue to do so at a cost of about $4,500 per student from the State plus the local contribution.

Have a Fiscal Plan That Balances Income to Expenditures And Maintains Excellence: Easy to say but here's some ideas that can do just that. (Cue howls of rage) . **Outsource (contract) many of the arts programs to local arts organizations, using our schools' classrooms, theaters and art rooms. Average teacher plus benefits $145,000 per year for 6 periods a day; I think local arts people/organizations would be willing to do the arts for this amount. Plus we don't need to lose 10 days a year to professional development, or non-teaching time at the end of every semester for teachers to get in their grades, plus 3 days personal leave, plus sick days, etc, you get the gist. And plus plus you get specialists with expertise beyond what we offer now -more content, more expert content, more choice, etc. **Move to a 7 period day at the high school, meaning less teachers needed while all course offerings maintained. **Move to a trimester system at the high school of three semesters with five courses each, which allows for a possible total of 15 credits a student can earn vs. the 12 now. **Capture expensive teacher instructional time that is lost to such things as end-of-quarter/end-of-semester exams, where students who have no exams that day are not required to attend classes. **Increase the number of competitive grants awarded to the district to fund new programs and initiatives. The District's track record on competitive grants is pathetic when compared to other urban Districts, such as Anchorage.

OK, Kuba, there you have another take on school funding with some concrete ideas for the School Board and top administrators to work on. Mayor Ward and most of the assembly support our schools and want to give more. But it would be nice if they demonstrated to the Mayor and others what efforts the District is making to reduce costs at the same time they preserve programs. Can be done. Doug Crevensten

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