Ohio Overpays Public Schools and Voucher Program by Millions • Ohio Capital Journal

The State of Ohio accidentally overpaid schools $30 million due to an error in the funding formula. The state’s largest education union is weighing the pros and cons of what some might call a “happy accident.”

Ohio finally has a constitutional funding formula for the state’s public education system after nearly 30 years, but many schools are still struggling.

“There’s still a lot of work to be done on this,” said Ohio Education Association President Scott DiMauro.

Every dollar counts when it comes to schools, he added.

But a mistake in the funding formula has led to what could be considered good news for hundreds of schools.

The state overpaid K-12 school districts, charter schools and private school voucher programs by about $30 million this year.

“These could be salaries for staff to address class size issues; they could be additional resource officers; it could be some additional counselors or nurses; it could be assistance in terms of maintenance,” DiMauro added.

Financial records show districts such as Cleveland schools got about $700,000, Akron got $400,000, Parma got $175,000 and Canton got $145,000. Each was contacted, but no one was available to talk.

Here are the 10 best public schools:

Columbus City School District franklin $883,119.71
Cleveland Municipality Cuyahoga $695,676.50
Cincinnati Public Schools hamilton $691,698.52
Southwestern city franklin $457,222.20
Olentangy Local Delaware $425,474.01
city ​​of toledo Luke $411,892.89
City of Akron Summit $401,492.97
Local Lakota Butler $315,593.73
dublin city franklin $315,033.79
hilliard city franklin $295,391.54

In total, the Department of Education and Workforce overpaid public schools by $21 million, charters by $2 million, career centers by $1.2 million and county disability development boards by $135,000. The remaining amount, ranging from $4 million to $6 million, went to the EdChoice voucher program.

Luckily for schools, money has no visible ties.

“We’re not going to get all that money back,” said Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman, R-Lima.

Huffman acknowledged that the fluke was due to faulty data.

“There was an error in the calculation of the school funding formula,” he added.

DEW was asked for clarity on how this happened. Spokeswoman Lacey Snoke said the calculation system is based on the average amount of money a student needs by district. However, some schools did not report certain expenses, which ended up inflating the amount per student.

“Fourteen school districts did not report expenditures related to co-curricular athletic activities, so the approximately 11,000 students who attended those schools were excluded from the per-pupil amount calculation,” he wrote.

Including those students would have reduced the per-student amount used to calculate the formula by $1.40. This occurred for three of the per-student amounts used in the base cost calculation.

Not all schools benefited from the miscalculation. Eighty of the 610 public schools ended up owing money to the state.

Here are the top ten public schools that owed money to the state:

City of Beavercreek green -$1,798.42
East Cleveland City School District Cuyahoga -$1,119.80
city ​​of centerville montgomery -$1,067.46
City of Strongsville Cuyahoga -$1,064.78
Riverside Local Lake -$800.57
City of Lakewood Cuyahoga -$772.06
Large nut shop Delaware -$747.00
Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local green -$742.20
City of Brecksville-Broadview Heights Cuyahoga -$709.39
Local horse chestnut medina -$667.20

“I like to solve problems as quickly as possible; What we would simply do is, let’s say, starting in the next biennium, the basic formula would be based, not on what we paid, but on what we intended to pay,” Huffman explained.

DiMauro worries that Huffman’s solution, whether a quick technical fix or something larger, could actually hurt the funding formula. This is where the invisible the ropes can be.

It has taken the educator years to help implement a constitutional funding formula, opposed by Republican lawmakers like Huffman. Now that he’s finally here, he worries that this is a way to change the system.

“I would hate to see any harm done to the districts,” DiMauro said.

That change should occur before the end of June.

Continue WEWS House reporter Morgan Trau on Twitter and Facebook.

This article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published by the Ohio Capital Journal under a content sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republishing by other media outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.

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