1 / 100

The Game Changer NACTEI Pre-Conference Michael Brustein, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit

The Game Changer NACTEI Pre-Conference Michael Brustein, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit. May 15, 2012. THE TEST!. 2. Perkins Funding and Sequestration. Perkins Funding – July 1, 2012 June 30, 2013 $1,123,659 (.189 % cut)

jetta
Télécharger la présentation

The Game Changer NACTEI Pre-Conference Michael Brustein, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Game ChangerNACTEI Pre-ConferenceMichael Brustein, Esq.Brustein & Manasevit May 15, 2012

  2. THE TEST!

  3. 2. Perkins Funding and Sequestration • Perkins Funding – July 1, 2012 June 30, 2013 $1,123,659 (.189 % cut) • Constant with Allocation for July 1, 2011 June 30, 2012 (13% cut from prior year) • Administration 2013 Request: July 1, 2013 June 30, 2014 $1,123,030

  4. Budget Control Act • August 2011 • Raised the debt ceiling temporarily • Reduced spending caps by $891 billion over the next ten years • Created Congressional debt Supercommittee

  5. The Supercommittee: Not So Super • Tasked with cutting $1.5 trillion in spending over next decade by Thanksgiving 2011 • If at least $1.2 trillion in cuts were not agreed to by November 23, automatic cuts triggered in that same amount • Total failure to come to an agreement • Blamed on lack of agreement generally, and on issue of taxes vs. cuts • Failure of Supercommittee means automatic cuts through “sequestration”

  6. Sequestration: a Big Hairy Mess • Failure of Supercommittee means automatic cuts through “sequestration” • Cuts take effect January 2, 2013 • Cuts to some programs may take effect immediately (mid-year) • Cuts to education of up to $4.1 billion this coming year • Never really intended to happen?

  7. Sequestration Step-by-Step • Adjust total for interest to reflect lesser debt principal • $1.2 trillion  $984 billion • Divide by year from 2013 through 2021 • Split by function between defense and non-defense spending (about $54.5 billion each per year) • Take exempt programs out of the equation • Spread cuts equally among remaining programs in 2013(accomplished by reducing spending caps for 2014 and beyond) • Estimates on final cuts range from 5.5% - 9.1%

  8. Sequestration • What’s exempt? • Some low income assistance programs: • Social Security • Medicaid • TANF • SNAP • Many child nutrition and commodity food programs • Veterans benefits • Pell grants, in first year • What’s not exempt? • Defense spending, among other items

  9. Impact of Sequestration

  10. How to Avoid Sequestration? • Must be rescinded by an act of Congress through: • Regular- year appropriations legislation passed by House and Senate with specific rescission language; • An alternate spending plan with rescission language; or • Special legislation rescinding automatic cuts • All options must be approved by House, Senate, and President

  11. See Tab A

  12. The Search for Plan B • Alternative to sequestration is to pass a budget bill that undoes automatic cuts • Potential alternatives • President’s budget proposal • The Ryan budget • Other input

  13. The President’s Proposal • Overall, 2.5% increase in education spending ($1.72 billion) • New Race to the Top proposals for college affordability and completion, improving matriculation and reducing remediation ($1.55 billion) • Increases to Promise Neighborhoods, IDEA Part C • Legislative proposal would provide: • $30 billion to modernize schools • $25 billion to help hire and retain teachers • $1 billion for career academies • Other programs frozen at FY 12 levels (no cuts) • Includes: CTE, Title I, SIG, 21st CCLC, IDEA Part B

  14. The Ryan Budget • Proposed by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI), resolution passed House in March • Lowers spending caps by 5% in FY 2013; by 19% in FY 2014 • Huge cuts in almost all areas except defense • Education could lose $115 billion in the next decade • Restructuring of tax code, entitlements • Balances budget by 2040? • Negative reaction from Democrats, advocates, some moderate Republicans • “Thinly veiled social darwinism” (President Obama) • Goes against debt ceiling agreements on spending

  15. Other input • Defense industry: Don’t subject us to cuts • Chairman Kline (R-MN): Don’t cut IDEA • States: State and local revenues are dropping, can’t take more cuts at federal level • Leadership: need accountability for Supercommittee failure • Presidential and Congressional Elections a factor

  16. What’s Next for the Budget • House and Senate Appropriations Committees will draft spending bills • Debate on spending will be part of election • Most Likely: • Another Continuing Resolution (CR) and long budget battle • Continuing signs of schism within Republican party • Final action on sequestration and budget will come during lame duck session

  17. Sequestration Impact on CTE • $158 million cut! In first year alone…

  18. Suggestions to Minimize Impact 9% vs. 2% Sequestration CMIA

  19. 3. Maintenance of Effort • Section 311(b) of Perkins • Most Restrictive • Only One Waiver-Idaho 2002

  20. OVAE Comments on MOE (5/3/12) • Violations not readily apparent from FSR, CAR, or A-133 • Spectrum runs from solely State Administration $ to broad matrix • Focus on $ appropriated vs. $ expended for CTE

  21. OVAE Recommends • Handle problems informally • More formal, OGC involvement • Identify target number and OVAE will work to find solution • May shift from “aggregate” to “per student,” but be consistent (e.g. participant vs. concentrator)

  22. If MOE violation determined by either monitoring or A-133 Audit, state given 35 days to respond.

  23. See Appeal of Pennsylvania and Legislative ReliefAppendix B

  24. 4. Monitoring

  25. OIG Report on Monitoring

  26. ED Monitoring • OIG Report # I13K0002 • http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oig/aireports/i13k0002.pdf

  27. ED identified Grantees as – • “High Risk” • “At Risk”

  28. New ED Policy: • Discontinue “At Risk’ • Formula Grantees: “Active Engagement” • Discretionary Grantees: “Evidence of Risk”

  29. “Active Engagement” and “Evidence of Risk” not High Risk but requires ED action

  30. Of the 50 SEAs and 10 Territories: • 4 are High Risk • 20 are Active Engagement

  31. SEAs only formally notified if High Risk not active engagement

  32. High Risk: DC Guam VIDE American Samoa

  33. Active Engagement: CA BIE Marianas FL GA HI IL LA MI MS NJ NY PA PR TN TX

  34. Risk Mitigation for Discretionary Grants • More Frequent Reviews • On-site Visits • Special Conditions • High Risk Designation

  35. OVAE Comments (See Appendix B) • OVAE uses “Risk Analysis” Assign Risk Levels • Audits • Program Findings • Timing of Last Visit • Larger States

  36. LEAs and Postsecondary Institutions selected based on “program of study” analysis • but primary focus at SEA

  37. Considerable scrutiny on • Local application • Performance accountability • Validity and reliability of data

  38. Are all locals using same definitions as state? • Are multiple systems in state corrupting the data? • Is state providing T/A to locals?

  39. Due to reduction in OVAE personnel and resources, now shifting to “virtual monitoring.” • Kentucky is up first!

  40. 5. Shift of Focus

  41. Compliance Versus ResultsAudit Versus Monitoring Shift of Focus?

  42. Beltway “Noise”Program Success Trumps All

  43. March 2, 2012 OSEP Announcement: • Monitoring will shift from compliance focus to one driven by results change in mission? *OSEP will not conduct verification visits in 2012-2013

  44. Will OESE/OPE/OVAE follow?

  45. What about OIG? • Philadelphia • Detroit • Los Angeles • Camden • Houston • Kiryas Joel

  46. Camden, NJ Audit March 2012(A02K0014) • Designate Camden as High Risk • Impose Special Conditions • Appoint 3rd Party Servicer • Rescind Camden “Flexibilities” on Schoolwide

  47. What about Single Audit? • Keep an eye on “Compliance Supplement”

  48. Reshaping Policies

  49. Is Congress on board?“We Can’t Wait” Crusade!

  50. Obama taking advantage of dysfunction in Congress to reshape policies

More Related