How Much Does Public School Facility Funding Depend on Property Wealth?

Author:

Brunner Eric1,Schwegman David2,Vincent Jeffrey M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Policy, University of Connecticut, 10 Prospect Street, 4th Floor, Hartford, CT 06103 eric.brunner@uconn.edu

2. Department of Public Administration and Policy, American University, School of Public Affairs, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20016 schwegma@american.edu

3. Center for Cities and Schools, University of California, 316 Wurster Hall #1870 Berkeley, CA 94720-1870 jvincent@berkeley.edu

Abstract

Abstract We examine how funding for public school facilities varies with school district property wealth and household income. Using data on school facility (i.e., capital) funding in California from fiscal years 1986-87 to 2015-16, we find that funding for school construction and modernization varies widely across districts. Disparities in funding are driven primarily by inter-district differences in property wealth with the highest property wealth districts raising significantly more funding for school facilities. Assessed value per-pupil in California is also negatively correlated with the share of disadvantaged students and students of color. As a result, school facility funding tends to be substantially lower in districts with the highest concentrations of disadvantaged students and students of color.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Education

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