98-003218
School Board Of Calhoun County vs.
Department Of Education
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, April 13, 1999.
Recommended Order on Tuesday, April 13, 1999.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8CHARLOTTE COUNTY SCHOOL )
12BOARD, )
14)
15Petitioner, )
17)
18vs. ) Case No. 98-3218
23)
24DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, )
28)
29Respondent. )
31______________________________)
32RECOMMENDED ORDER
34The parties presented this case by a stipulated record to
44Robert E. Meale, Administrative Law Judge of the Division of
54Administrative Hearings.
56APPEARANCES
57For Petitioner: Anne Longman
61Edwin A. Steinmeyer
64Lewis, Longman & Walker, P.A.
69Post Office Box 10788
73Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0788
76For Respondent: Dean Andrews
80Deputy General Counsel
83Department of Education
861701 The Capitol
89Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
92STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
96The issue is whether Petitioner is entitl ed to any funding,
107under the Florida Education Finance Program, for those full-time
116equivalent students whom Petitioner enrolled, taught, and
123initially reported, in a dropout prevention program, but whom
132Petitioner later reported in a lower-funded basic program after
141discovering that these full-time equivalent students exceeded the
149legislatively imposed enrollment ceiling applicable to the
156program group of which the dropout-prevention program is a part.
166PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
168By letter dated February 28, 19 96, Respondent informed
177Petitioner that, due to, among other deficiencies, Petitioner's
185misreporting of numerous full-time equivalencies, Respondent was
192reducing Petitioner's 1993-94 Florida Education Finance Program
199allocation by $346,428.
203By letter dated April 23, 1996, Petitioner requested a
212formal hearing.
214The parties waived a hearing and presented the case by way
225of 21 stipulated exhibits and 10 deposition transcripts.
233FINDINGS OF FACT
2361. On average, Florida school districts receive about 50
245percent of their financial support from state sources, 43 percent
255from local sources, and 7 percent from federal sources. In
2651993 -94, the Legislature appropriated $4,526,812,758 under the
276Florida Education Finance Program ( FEFP) and required local
285funding of $3,109,579,079.
2912. Two parts of the FEFP funding process are relevant to
302this case: setting weighted enrollment ceilings (caps) and
310reporting full-time equivalent students ( FTEs). This case arose
319when the Auditor General discovered that Petitioner reported
327Dropout Prevention FTEs as lower-funded, basic education FTEs.
335Petitioner reported these FTEs in this fashion due to its concern
346that it would receive no FEFP funding for these FTEs, if reported
358as Dropout Prevention FTEs, because they were over the cap set
369for the program group of which the Dropout Prevention program was
380a part.
3823. Setting caps takes place in two stages. The first and
393generally more important stage starts with the preparation by
402each school district of projections, for the following school
411year, of FTEs by program. The second stage of setting caps
422requires that Respondent make complicated, technical adjustments
429when actual FTEs, by program group, exceed the cap for that
440program group.
4424. The terms, "program" and "program group," are important.
451For 1993-94, Section 236.012(1), Florida Statutes (1993) (all
459references to "Section" shall be to the 1993 Florida Statutes),
469identifies the following program groups and their constituent
477programs:
4781. Basic programs.--
481a. Kindergarten and grades 1, 2, and 3.
489b. Grades 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
497c. Grades 9, 10, 11, and 12.
5042. Special programs for exceptional
509students.--
510[list of 15 exceptional student education
516programs, such as specific learning
521disability and emotionally handicapped]
5253. Special adult general education
530programs.--
531* * *
5344. Special vocational-technical programs
538job -preparatory.--
540* * *
5435. Special vocational-technical-adult
546supplemental.--
547* * *
5506. Students-at-risk programs.--
553a. Dropout prevention.
556b. Kindergarten through grade 3 ESOL
562[English Speakers of Other Languages].
567c. Grades 4 through 8 ESOL.
573d. Grades 9 through 12 ESOL.
5795. Each district initially submits its FTE projections to
588Respondent where various persons with programmatic and funding
596expertise examine and review the projections for accuracy. The
605cap-setting process continues when, pursuant to Section
612216.136(4), Respondent forwards the FTE projections to the Public
621Schools Education Estimating Conference (Estimating Conference),
627which consists of representatives of the House and Senate staffs,
637the Governor's Office, and the Joint Legislative Committee. The
646Estimating Conference accepts, increases, or decreases the FTE
654projections and sends its projections to the Florida Legislature,
663which, in deciding upon FEFP appropriations for the next school
673year, may accept, increase, or decrease the Estimating
681Conference's FTE projections. This marks the end of the first
691stage of the cap-setting process.
6966. Both stages of the cap-setting process reveal a finely
706tuned funding process that weighs the need for predictability in
716funding, so that the Legislature can know how much it is sending
728to the districts and each district can know how much it will have
741to spend, against the need for flexibility, so that, for
751instance, if Hurricane Andrew sends numerous ESOL students from
760Dade County to Hillsborough County, after the first stage of the
771cap-setting process is completed, the receiving school district
779can obtain the funds properly to educate these children.
7887. The second stage of the cap-setting process is described
798in Section 236.081(1)(d). Section 236.081(1)(d)1 authorizes
804Respondent to calculate a "maximum total weighted full-time
812equivalent student enrollment for each district." Of course,
820Section 236.081(1)(d)2 directs Respondent to begin the second
828stage of the cap-setting process by starting with the FTEs set at
840the end of the first stage, or, in other words, the "enrollment
852estimates used by the Legislature to calculate the FEFP."
8618. Section 236.081(1)(d)3 directs Respondent to calculate
868caps by groups of program groups. Referring back to the above-
879cited statute listing program groups, Group 1 is the first of the
891six listed groups, which is nearly all of basic education. Group
9022 includes the second and sixth groups, which are, respectively,
912exceptional student education ( ESE) and students-at-risk programs
920(At-Risk), including Dropout Prevention. The rest of Group 2 is
930minor parts of basic education and all vocational education
939programs in grades seven thorough twelve. Group 3 consists of
949all adult education programs.
9539. The most complicated part of the second stage of setting
964caps is described in Section 236.081(1)(d)3.a-c. This section
972first makes clear that this part of the cap-setting process does
983not involve Group 1, which, as noted above, is nearly all of the
996basic education programs. Two provisions make this clear.
1004First, Subsection 236.081(1)(d)3.a and b apply only to Groups 2
1014and 3. Second, the last sentence of Section
1022236.081(1)(d)3.b.(IV) states: "For any calculation of the FEFP,
1030the enrollment ceiling [ i.e. , cap] for [G] roup 1 shall be
1042calculated by multiplying the actual enrollment for each program
1051in the program group by its appropriate program weight."
106010. Section 236.081(1)(c) directs the Legislature to
1067establish annually in its General Appropriations Act a cost
1076factor for each of the listed programs under the six program
1087groups. This adjustment reflects, for instance, the greater cost
1096of educating ESE students versus basic-education students.
110311. The remainder of this recommended order will ignore
1112Group 3 because it plays no role in this case and its mention
1125unnecessarily complicates the presentation of information.
113112. Section 236.081(1)(d)3.a describes the caps for Group 2
1140as the sum of the weighted caps ( i.e. , stage-one FTEs for each
1153program times a cost factor for each program) for each program
1164contained in Group 2. The resulting cap must be increased by the
1176receipt of FTEs from the Department of Health and Rehabilitative
1186Services (now Department of Juvenile Justice), but this
1194adjustment is irrelevant to this case.
120013. Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b addresses the possibility of
1207over-enrollment. (The discussion of reporting FTEs takes place
1215later in this recommended order.) Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b
1222directs Respondent, "for any calculation of the FEFP," to follow
1232a specific procedure when actual enrollments exceed the cap for
1242Group 2; the purpose of the procedure is to reduce the "weighted
1254[actual] enrollment for that group to equal the enrollment
1263ceiling [ i.e. , cap]."
126714. Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b(I) directs Respondent first to
1274subtract the weighted cap for each program from the weighted
1284actual enrollment for that program. If the result is greater
1294than zero for any program, Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b(II) directs
1302Respondent to calculate a reduction proportion "for the program"
1311by dividing the net amount by which the weighted actual
1321enrollment in the program group exceeds the weighted cap for the
1332group by the gross amount by which the weighted actual
1342enrollments in over-the-cap individual programs exceed the
1349weighted caps for each of these groups.
135615. An illustration is useful. Assume a hypothetical group
1365subject to capping that contains only four programs with caps of
1376100, 100, 300, and 500 FTEs. Assume actual enrollments,
1385respectively, of 100, 100, 380, and 490 FTEs. The reduction
1395proportion for the third program, which is the only over-the-cap
1405program, would contain a numerator of 70 (because of the netting
1416of the 10 under-the-cap FTEs in the fourth group) and a
1427denominator of 80.
143016. Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b(III) directs Respondent to
1436multiply the resulting reduction proportion by the total amount
1445by which the program group's enrollment exceeds the cap. The
1455first sentence of Section 236.081(1)(d)3.b(IV) directs Respondent
1462to subtract the resulting prorated reduction amount from the
1471program's weighted enrollment.
147417. An important principle emerges at this point: the
1483over-the-cap issues are determined on the basis of the program
1493group. Over-the-cap FTEs in programs within a group are offset
1503by unused FTEs from under-the-cap programs in the same group.
151318. As already noted, the last sentence of Section
1522236.081(1)(d)3.b(IV) directs Respondent to calculate the cap for
1530Group 1 by multiplying the actual enrollment in each program by
1541its cost factor. In the same vein, Section 236.081(1)(d)3.c
1550limits the maximum reduction for Group 2 (and Group 3) by
1561stipulating that the weighted enrollment shall be not less than
1571the sum of the following two numbers. For programs with cost
1582factors of 1.0 or more, such as ESE and At-Risk programs,
1593Respondent must, as required by Section 236.081(1)(d)3.c(I),
1600multiply the "reported FTE" by 1.0. For programs with cost
1610factors of less than 1.0, Respondent must, as required by Section
1621236.081(1)(d)3.d(II), multiply the "projected FTE" by the actual
1629cost factor.
163119. Thus, the effect of Section 236.081(1)(d)3.c(I) is to
1640provide that the weighted cap for Group 2 is never less than the
1653amount yielded by multiplying the "reported FTE[s]" for all
1662programs in the group with a cost factor of 1.0 or more by 1.0.
1676However, it is important to note that the minimal funding
1686guaranteed by Section 236.081(1)(d)3.c(I) does not ensure that
1694all over-the-cap FTEs in, say, Dropout Prevention or Specific
1703Learning Disabilities, will receive a cost factor of no less than
17141.0, even if over the cap; instead, the statute guarantees only
1725that, after all adjustments, no district will receive less than a
1736cost factor of 1.0 for all reported FTEs in Group 2.
174720. Turning to the reporting of FTEs, Section 236.081(1)(a)
1756requires each school district to conduct no more than nine week-
1767long surveys for the purpose of reporting actual FTEs. This
1777statute also requires that each district compute its FTEs "in
1787accordance with the regulations of the state board."
179521. For 1993-94, Respondent issued a document entitled
"1803Standard Procedures for Reporting FTE Earned, Course and Other
1812Issues Regarding the Florida Education Finance Program 1993-94"
1820(Standard Procedures).
182222. Standard Procedures requires districts to use the cited
1831procedures "for reporting unweighted FTE by student by course,
1840for allocating residual FTE to courses funded through the Basic
1850Program categories after special program by student by course FTE
1860is allocated, and for maintaining audit documentation for FTE
1869reporting procedures and elements." Standard Procedures, page 1.
187723. Standard Procedures requires districts to sort their
1885course records into "rank order" with all so-called "special"
1894programs, which includes all programs in the ESE and At-Risk
1904program groups, in the first group to be reported, and all basic
1916programs in the second group to be reported. Standard
1925Procedures, page 11.
192824. However, each district may choose
1934in which order the special program category
1941courses will, in fact, receive consideration.
1947That is, if a student has course records with
1956FEFP Program Numbers in two special program
1963categories and one Basic Program, the
1969district may chose [ sic ] which of the special
1979program categories gets selected for
1984consideration first for determination of FTE
1990Earned, Course, except that BOTH special
1996program categories are considered and FUNDED
2002before any time for the Basic Program is
2010considered for funding. . . .
2016Standard Procedures, pages 11-12.
202025. Prior to submitting its FTEs on the approved form, each
2031district must edit its data so that, among other things, "[a] ll
2043courses with special program FEFP Program Numbers must be
2052considered and funded prior to considering courses with Basic
2061program numbers [subject to two exceptions irrelevant to this
2070case]." Standard Procedures, page 20.
207526. For reporting FTEs in a Dropout Prevention program,
2084Standard Procedures provides:
2087Section 228.041(29), Florida Statutes as
2092amended, provides the definition of a dropout
2099student. However, a student meeting this
2105definition must also meet the eligibility and
2112program requirements as set forth in Section
2119230.2316(4), Florida Statutes. Finally, only
2124those students who meet the eligibility
2130criteria, are admitted to the program
2136according to the admission procedures, and
2142participate in instruction specified in any
2148one of the eligible dropout prevention
2154programs under operating procedures in an
2160approved district dropout plan, as approved
2166by the Department of Education for 1993-94,
2173may be reported as FTE in FEFP Program Number
2182120 [Dropout Prevention Program]. . . .
2189All students who are reported as
2195participating in the Dropout Prevention
2200Program must be properly shown as being in
2208one of the Dropout Prevention Program
2214categories. Failure to properly identify the
2220program will result in the FTE Earned,
2227Course, being nulled for the record
2233submitted.
2234Standard Procedures, page 27.
223827. After each district reports its FTEs, Respondent
2246calculates the proper FEFP funding by multiplying the appropriate
2255FTEs by the appropriate base student allocation, which, under
2264Section 236.081(1)(b), the Legislature must set annually in its
2273General Appropriations Act. Under Section 236.081(1)(c),
2279Respondent then multiplies applies the cost factor for each
2288program before undertaking the second stage of the cap-setting
2297described above and in Section 236.081(1)(d).
230328. In 1993-94, the base student allocation was $2501.05,
2312the cost factor for grades 4-8 basic education was 1.0, the cost
2324factor for grades 9-12 basic education was 1.224, and the cost
2335factor for dropout prevention was 1.615. In 1993-94, the funding
2345allocated for basic-education students was $1000-$1500 less per
2353student than the funding allocated for dropout prevention.
236129. During 1993-94, Respondent reported 15,166.04 full-time
2369equivalent students ( FTEs) in nine elementary schools, four
2378middle schools, three high schools, one adult education center,
2387one area vocational-technical school, two exceptional centers,
2394and two other educational centers.
239930. Rule 6A-1.0451, Florida Administrative Code, provides
2406that the Commissioner of Education shall prescribe the dates for
2416FTE surveys. ( All references to Rules are to the Florida
2427Administrative Code.) For 1993-94, the FTE surveys took place
2436July 12-16, 1993; October 4-8, 1993; February 7-11, 1994; and
2446June 20-24, 1994.
244931. Rule 6A-1.0451(7) provides that districts shall report
2457the FTEs in all special programs in the special program cost
2468factor prescribed in Section 236.08(1)(c), "when the student is
2477eligible and is attending a class, course, or program which has
2488met all of the criteria for the special program cost factor."
249932. By memorandum dated March 9, 1994, in connection with
2509the February FTE survey, one of Petitioner's deputy
2517superintendents directed Petitioner's Director of Management
2523Information Services to change 127 unweighted FTEs from the
2532Dropout Prevention program to a basic program to "prevent us from
2543exceeding our caps in Category [Group] 2 programs."
255133. Petitioner later reported these FTEs by reporting them
2560as basic education FTEs when they were eligible for, enrolled in,
2571and previously reported in the Dropout Prevention program.
257934. By Audit Report issued October 20, 1995, the Office of
2590the Auditor General determined that Petitioner misreported 86.52
2598unweighted FTEs as basic education FTEs, when it should have
2608reported them as Dropout Prevention FTEs. The Audit Report also
2618reclassified one student, at 0.4165 unweighted FTEs, from the
2627Dropout Prevention program to a basic education program due to
2637the absence of adequate documentation.
264235. Rule 6A-1.0453(2) authorizes the Auditor General to
2650conduct audits of districts receiving FEFP funding. Rule
26586A -1.0453(3) requires the audit report to identify:
2666(a) Errors in the reported full-time
2672equivalent membership by program category;
2677(b) Improper classification or placement of
2683individual students assigned to educational
2688alternative or exceptional student programs;
2693and
2694(c) Failure of classes or programs to meet
2702criteria established by the State Board
2708[citations omitted] for basic or special
2714programs.
271536. Rule 6A-1.0453(4) provides:
2719Upon receipt of an official audit report, the
2727Deputy Commissioner for Planning, Budgeting
2732and Management shall compute the amount of
2739adjustment to the district's allocation of
2745state funds necessary to compensate for the
2752errors or deficiencies noted in
2757subsection (2). In those instances where a
2764student has been improperly classified or
2770placed in an exceptional student program, and
2777in those instances were a special program
2784fails to meet the prescribed criteria, the
2791adjustment shall be computed on the basis of
2799the basic program cost factor for which each
2807student qualifies. Except for adjustments
2812made during the fiscal year in which the
2820discrepancies occurred[,] adjustments shall
2825be limited to fund allocations and no changes
2833shall be made in full-time equivalent
2839membership data.
284137. By letter dated February 28, 1996, Respondent advised
2850Petitioner of a reduction in FEFP funding for the 1993-94 school
2861year, resulting from the findings of the Audit Report, of
2871$346,428. A letter dated February 12, 1999, from counsel for
2882Respondent to counsel for Petitioner, identifies the portion of
2891this sum attributable to the misreporting of Dropout Prevention
2900FTEs as $267,715.
290438. Rule 6A-1.0453(5) requires Respondent to provide
2911official notice to Petitioner of all adjustments following the
2920issuance of the audit report. This notice must include a
"2930statement citing the specific law or rule upon which the finding
2941of each discrepancy is based, and the authority under which the
2952adjustment is to be made . . .."
296039. The parties participated in an informal conference, as
2969provided by Rule 6A-1.0453(6). The parties have largely framed
2978the issue in the informal conference as whether Petitioner is
2988free to report Dropout Prevention FTEs as basic education FTEs.
2998The parties were unable to resolve this issue.
300640. Attempting to find a basis for compromise, Respondent's
3015representatives reviewed Petitioner's Dropout Prevention records
3021in the hope of finding grounds for determinations of
3030ineligibility, so as to permit a reclassification of over-the-cap
3039Dropout Prevention FTEs as basic education FTEs and allow some
3049funding, as the Audit Report did in the case of the one student
3062improperly classified for the Dropout Prevention program.
306941. However, Respondent's representatives were unable to
3076find such documentation errors. Thus, Respondent has maintained
3084its position that the Dropout Prevention FTEs in excess of the
3095enrollment cap are funded at zero, not even at the lesser basic
3107education rate. (Sometimes, Respondent's witnesses express the
3114zero funding differently by saying that the over-the-cap Dropout
3123Prevention FTEs do not generate their own FEFP funds, but
3133participate pro rata in the FEFP funds generated by the
3143under -the -cap Dropout Prev ention FTEs. However, this amounts to
3154the same thing: no more FEFP funding for enrolling and teaching
3165over-the-cap Dropout Prevention FTEs. All references in this
3173recommended order to zero funding thus include prorate funding.)
318242. Nothing in the record cites the authority by which
3192Respondent zero-funded the over-the-cap Dropout Prevention FTEs,
3199whom Petitioner reported as basic education FTEs. Interestingly,
3207six of Respondent's employees cited the "law" that over-the-cap
3216FTEs, presumably by group rather than individual program, receive
3225zero funding, but not one of them could cite to the authority for
3238this "law." ( Eggers, page 17; Stewart, page 11; Goff, page 11;
3250Pierson, page 10; Butler, page 30; and Jarrett, pages 20 and 22.)
326243. Section 236.012(2) states in part that the purpose of
3272the FEFP is:
3275(2) To increase the authority and
3281responsibility of districts for deciding
3286matters of instructional organization and
3291method and to encourage district initiative
3297in seeking more effective and efficient means
3304of achieving the goals of the various
3311programs.
33121. The material provisions of the above-described laws
3320remain in effect today. The issue of funding over-the-cap FTEs
3330in At-Risk programs is not unique to this case. Another case
3341involving Putnam County is reportedly pending. Also, an Audit
3350Report issued June 15, 1995, involving FEFP funding for the
3360Hillsborough County School District found intentional
3366misreporting of over-the-cap ESOL FTEs as basic education FTEs to
3376avoid zero funding.
33792. Respondent's Policy Director, Link Jarrett introduced a
3387much-needed perspective when he alluded to the necessity of
3396balancing the educational needs of children against the complex
3405funding considerations that have dominated this dispute.
3412Mr. Jarrett testified:
3415. . . we are making a good faith effort to
3426the parent and to the child to place the
3435student in the program, regardless of what
3442the funding is. That's easy for me to maybe
3451say at the State level.
3456* * *
3459. . . the basic [tenet] on equal education
3468opportunity in serving these children is you
3475place them in the programs that they need to
3484be served in. And to some extent, you might
3493take a risk in exceeding your cap. And is
3502that worth not placing a student in a program
3511and not giving him the appropriate--I would
3518say no. . . .
3523[If I were a District Finance Officer], I
3531would be saying serve the kids, and where
3539they fall--I would give you my best estimate
3547of the children to be served, and I would
3556serve them in those programs, and I would let
3565the chips fall where they may.
3571Transcript of Link Jarrett deposition, pages 39-40.
3578CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
35813. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction
3589over the subject matter. Section 120.57(1).
35954. Neither party argues the burden of proof in its proposed
3606recommended order. Courts generally assign the burden of proof
3615on the party with the affirmative of the issue. See, e.g. , Young
3627v. Department of Community Affairs , 625 So. 2d 831 (Fla. 1993);
3638Department of Banking and Finance v. Osborne Stern and Company,
3648Inc. , 670 So. 2d 932 (Fla. 1996). Absent the Audit Report and
3660the action taken by Respondent to recalculate the Group 2
3670weighted cap, Petitioner would have retained the funds in dispute
3680over the classification of the Dropout Prevention FTEs.
3688Respondent has the affirmative of the issue to show that
3698Petitioner is entitled to zero funding for its over-the-cap
3707Dropout Prevention FTEs. Although the burden of proof is on
3717Respondent, the same findings, conclusions, and recommendation
3724would have followed if the burden of proof had been on
3735Petitioner.
37365. Petitioner's main argument is that Dropout Prevention
3744FTE reporting is voluntary and, thus, Petitioner could, for any
3754reason, choose to report these FTEs as basic education FTEs.
37646. This argument is unsupported by Rule 6A-1.0451(7),
3772which requires that districts report students in special programs
3781as FTEs in the special program in which they are receiving
3792instruction. The cited provision at page 11 of Standard
3801Provisions, which requires the presentation of special program
3809FTEs prior to basic program FTEs, also compels that Petitioner
3819classify its Dropout Prevention FTEs in the Dropout Prevention
3828program (unless they qualified for another special program, in
3837which case Petitioner could exercise discretionas between or
3845among two or more such special programs, but not as between or
3857among one or more special programs and one or more basic
3868programs). The contrary result would, among other things,
3876distort the enrollment data, on which future educational planning
3885is based.
38877. In support of its contrary argument, Petitioner relies
3896primarily on the cited provisions of page 27 of the Standard
3907Procedures, which provides that Petitioner "may" report as
3915Dropout Prevention FTEs only those students meeting various
3923criteria. This use of "may" does not mean that such reporting is
3935permissive or voluntary, rather than mandatory. Rather, such use
3944of "may" means that districts are only permitted to report as
3955Dropout Prevention FTEs those students who meet the various
3964criteria.
39658. Close examination of the Dropout Prevention provisions,
3973including the "may" clause, and the other cited portions of the
3984Standard Procedures explains the use of "may." The assumption of
3994the Standard Procedures is that districts will want to report
4004FTEs in the programs with the highest possible cost factors.
4014This bias built into the Standard Procedures acknowledges no
4023downside to this reporting practice, as would be consistent with
4033the absence of punitive zero funding for over-the-cap Group 2
4043FTEs.
40449. Although Petitioner may not generally report Dropout
4052Prevention FTEs as basic education FTEs, the cited provisions at
4062pages 11 -12 and 20 of the Standard Procedures establish an
4073exception to this general prohibition. As provided by these
4082cited provisions, the general requirement to report special
4090program FTEs only as special program FTEs, rather than basic
4100program FTEs, applies only as long as the special program FTEs
4111are funded. By implication, once the special program FTEs are no
4122longer funded, a district may report these FTEs under basic
4132programs, which would ensure the minimal cost factor accorded
4141basic education FTEs.
414410. The exception that allows districts to report and
4153Respondent to fund as basic education FTEs what would otherwise
4163be unfunded special program FTEs explains the action of the
4173Auditor General, upon discovering inadequate documentation for
4180one reported Dropout Prevention student, in converting his
4188Dropout Prevention FTE to a basic education FTE, rather than zero
4199funding the student. Similarly, this exception explains the
4207actions of Respondent's representatives in seeking evidence of
4215additional students failing to meet the criteria of the Dropout
4225Prevention program; Respondent, too, sought the chance to
4233reclassify these over-the-cap Dropout Prevention FTEs as basic
4241education FTEs in order not to zero fund them.
425011. The exception that allows districts to report and
4259Respondent to fund as basic education FTEs what would otherwise
4269be unfunded special program FTEs is not limited to special
4279program FTEs that are unfunded due to the disqualification of the
4290program or the student. This exception applies equally to
4299special program FTEs that would otherwise be unfunded because
4308they exceed the group cap.
431312. In providing for caps, the Legislature did not
4322expressly authorize zero funding for all over -the -cap Group 2
4333FTEs. What is clear from the complicated capping statute is that
4344the Legislature allowed a district effectively to borrow unused
4353weighted, below-the-cap FTEs from one program in Group 2 to
4363offset weighted, above-the-cap FTEs from another program in
4371Group 2. This liberal approach to funding over-the-cap programs
4380does not suggest an intent to zero fund over-the-cap programs in
4391over-the-cap groups.
439313. Consistent with this Legislative intent are the
4401already-discussed provisions of the Standard Procedures
4407prioritizing the reporting of "funded" special-program FTEs.
441414. In addition to the lack of legal support for the policy
4426of zero funding over-the-cap special program FTEs, two practical
4435issues may arise as a result of this policy of depriving
4446districts even of basic education funding for such FTEs. First,
4456districts that would take the risk of reduced funding of FTEs in
4468nonmandatory special programs, such as Dropout Prevention and
4476ESOL (as opposed to ESE), might find themselves unable to take
4487the risk of no funding whatsoever. These districts would thus
4497reduce or eliminate these important programs. Second, districts
4505belatedly finding themselves in a grave financial situation due
4514to zero funding may be tempted to take advantage of the more
4526liberal treatment afforded by Respondent and the Auditor General
4535to students or programs determined not to meet the criteria of
4546the applicable special program. The funding distinction
4553maintained between over-the-cap special program FTEs and
4560disqualified special programs or students in special programs
4568invites abuse of the FEFP funding process by individual district
4578employees achieving the noncompliance of sufficient number of
4586cumulative files or even of program documentation to ensure that
4596the over-the-cap special program FTEs are funded as basic
4605education FTEs. A funding policy that prefers disqualified FTEs
4614to over-the-cap FTEs defies logic because the greater culpability
4623attaches to the acts and omissions that produce the
4632disqualification of a student or an entire program than to the
4643acts and omissions that result in the over-enrollment of special
4653program students, especially when the enrollment census of a
4662large component of the Group 2 students-- ESE--is mandatory and
4672largely out of the control of the districts.
468015. In the final analysis, Petitioner has provided
4688important Dropout Prevention educational services through an
4695eligible program to eligible students, but has provided the
4704services to more students than the Legislature agreed to fund at
4715enhanced levels. Respondent's punitive remedy of zero funding
4723these over-the-cap special program FTEs lacks any explicit legal
4732authority, serves no legitimate educational or funding policy,
4740and is arbitrary and capricious. Funding these over-the-cap
4748special program FTEs as basic education FTEs is supported by the
4759law and logic.
4762RECOMMENDATION
4763It is
4765RECOMMENDED that the State Board of Education enter a final
4775order declaring that Petitioner is entitled to: a) funding at
4785the Dropout Prevention cost factor for any FTEs that qualified to
4796be reported as Dropout Prevention FTEs and that were not over the
4808Group 2 cap; and b) funding at the basic education cost factor
4820for any remaining FTEs that qualified to be reported as Dropout
4831Prevention FTEs, but were over the Group 2 cap.
4840DONE AND ENTERED this 13th day of April, 1999, in
4850Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
4854___________________________________
4855ROBERT E. MEALE
4858Administrative Law Judge
4861Division of Administrative Hearings
4865The DeSoto Building
48681230 Apalachee Parkway
4871Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
4874(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
4878Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
4882www.doah.state.fl.us
4883Filed with the Clerk of the
4889Division of Administrative Hearings
4893this 13th day of April, 1999.
4899COPIES FURNISHED:
4901Anne Longman
4903Edwin A. Steinmeyer
4906Lewis, Longman & Walker, P.A.
4911Post Office Box 10788
4915Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0788
4918Dean Andrews
4920Deputy General Counsel
4923Department of Education
49261701 The Capitol
4929Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
4932Michael H. Olenick, General Counsel
4937Department of Education
4940The Capitol, Suite 1701
4944Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
4947Honorable Tom Gallagher
4950Commissioner of Education
4953Department of Education
4956The Capitol, Plaza Level 08
4961Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
4964NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
4970All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within 15
4981days from the date of this recommended order. Any exceptions to
4992this recommended order must be filed with the agency that will
5003issue the final order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- Date: 07/19/1999
- Proceedings: Final Order filed.
- Date: 07/15/1999
- Proceedings: Final Order filed.
- Date: 04/12/1999
- Proceedings: (Respondent) Page 13 that was omitted from the Respondent`s Recommended Order (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 04/05/1999
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Recommended Order (For Judge Signature) (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 04/05/1999
- Proceedings: Petitioner Charlotte County School Board`s Proposed Recommended Order (For Judge Signature); Appendix to Petitioner Charlotte County School Board`s Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 03/10/1999
- Proceedings: The Deposition of: Link Jarrett ; Summary Reports of unweighted FTE for all school districts for all four FTE counts from the 1988-89 school year through the 1997-98 school year filed.
- Date: 03/10/1999
- Proceedings: The Deposition of: Shirley Ann Goff ; The Deposition: of Wayne Pierson ; The Deposition of: Mary Jo Butler filed.
- Date: 03/10/1999
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Notice of Filing; Deposition of: Jeanine Blomberg ; The Deposition of: Mark Eggers ; The Deposition of: Carolyn Dubard ; The Deposition of: John Stewart filed.
- Date: 03/05/1999
- Proceedings: Notice of Filing, Deposition of Gary Kehrer & Deposition of Grefory S. Griner rec`d
- Date: 03/05/1999
- Proceedings: Notice of Filing Documents 1 thru 21 (Petitioner) rec`d
- Date: 03/04/1999
- Proceedings: Parties` Stipulated Record of the Proceedings rec`d
- Date: 03/03/1999
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Notice of Filing rec`d
- Date: 03/02/1999
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
- Date: 02/25/1999
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
- Date: 02/23/1999
- Proceedings: (Respondent) Request for Issuance of Subpoenas (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 02/19/1999
- Proceedings: Order Denying Motion for Continuance sent out. (motion denied)
- Date: 02/19/1999
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
- Date: 02/12/1999
- Proceedings: (Respondent) 2/Notice of Taking Deposition (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 01/14/1999
- Proceedings: Second Amended Notice of Hearing as to Building and Room Number sent out. (hearing set for March 8-9, 1999; 10:00am; Port Charlotte)
- Date: 12/07/1998
- Proceedings: (Respondent) Motion for Order Compelling Production of Documents; Cover Letter (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 10/27/1998
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Amended Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing reset for March 8-9, 1999; 10:00am; Port Charlotte)
- Date: 10/19/1998
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Response to Respondent`s Request for Production of Documents filed.
- Date: 10/19/1998
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Certificate of Serving Petitioner`s Answers to Respondent`s First Interrogatories to Petitioner; Petitioner`s Answers to Respondent`s First Interrogatories filed.
- Date: 10/19/1998
- Proceedings: (A. Longman) Stipulated Motion for Continuance and Rescheduling of Hearing filed.
- Date: 10/06/1998
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Answers to Interrogatories (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 10/06/1998
- Proceedings: Notice of Certificate of Serving Respondent`s Answers to Petitioner`s First Interrogatories (filed via facsimile).
- Date: 09/15/1998
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Request for Production of Documents to Petitioner filed.
- Date: 09/15/1998
- Proceedings: Respondent`s First Interrogatories to Petitioner; Notice and Certificate of Serving Respondent`s First Interrogatories to Petitioner filed.
- Date: 09/04/1998
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Request for Production of Documents to Respondent; Notice and Certificate of Serving Petitioner`s First Interrogatories to Respondent filed.
- Date: 08/05/1998
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for Nov. 5-6, 1998; 9:00am; Port Charlotte)
- Date: 08/03/1998
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Notice of Appearance and Response to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 07/27/1998
- Proceedings: Response of Respondent to Initial Order filed.
- Date: 07/22/1998
- Proceedings: Initial Order issued.
- Date: 07/17/1998
- Proceedings: Agency Referral Letter; Request for For Hearing, Letter Form; Agency Action Letter filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- ROBERT E. MEALE
- Date Filed:
- 07/17/1998
- Date Assignment:
- 07/22/1998
- Last Docket Entry:
- 07/19/1999
- Location:
- Port Charlotte, Florida
- District:
- Middle
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED