School consolidation could save $15 million, according to Luna

By Brad Iverson-Long
March 25th, 2010
Idaho Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Luna
Idaho Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Luna

New figures from Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Luna shows that Idaho could save $15.3 million a year in state funding by consolidating the state’s 115 school districts to match the boundaries of the state’s 44 counties.  Most of that savings, $11.7 million, would come from consolidating districts in seven counties with multiple school districts.  Those estimates come from the current year of school spending.  The state is spends more than $1.2 billion on public schools, so consolidation would save approximately 1 percent of state school spending.

Luna told Idaho senators Wednesday that he doesn’t want the state to require districts to merge.  “I do not support forced consolidation,” he said.  “I have respect for local control.”  He said that many smaller districts are wary of consolidation.  “When I go into our small rural districts, the fear of  consolidation is higher,” he said.  “Most everybody believes that Idaho should consolidate, but just not their district.”  While school consolidation has been a popular topic of questions for Luna, lawmakers have taken no action on consolidation this session.

Luna said the overall savings of consolidation may not be as large as some people would expect because while Idaho has a larger number of school district than some of its neighbors, the state is spending less on administrative costs than surrounding states.  Idaho’s 115 districts are more than Nevada, Wyoming, and Utah combined, but Wyoming pays almost twice as much on school administration, per student.  “There is not a big financial savings that some people intuitively assume would be there.”

The $15 million the Idaho State Department of Education identifies in savings comes from merging districts within a county and calculating the reduction in school support units, which is the department’s measure of students in a district that determines state funding.  Support units are similar to the number of classrooms in a district.  Larger school districts have more students in a support unit, while smaller districts are allowed fewer students in a support unit.  That disparity in funding is called a sparsity factor.

The counties that could save the most by merging all their districts are Twin Falls, Gooding, Canyon, Payette, Bingham, and Lincoln, accord to the education department figures.  Besides the sparsity factor, rural counties also wouldn’t see a reduction in support for isolated schools.  “If schools are really far away, they don’t get as much support, historically, from the central district,” said Jason Hancock, the education department’s deputy chief of staff.  “You don’t have those economies of scale in a remote location.”  Hancock added that new technologies could bridge that distance.  New legislation would be needed to change the funding formula for state money going to local school districts.

Luna said he favors encouraging districts to work across district lines and share services like technology support, human resources, and administrative services.

3 Responses to “School consolidation could save $15 million, according to Luna”

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Idaho Freedom Fndn and IdahoReporter.com, SundanceCompany. SundanceCompany said: RT @IdahoReporter: School consolidation could save $15 million, according to Luna http://ow.ly/16T3d7 [...]

  2. [...] blog post and Powerpoint presentation mirror a report to the Senate Education Committee March 25.  Idaho has 115 school districts.  Combining and consolidating those schools is a major topic of [...]

  3. Ingrid Elena Pavia says:

    Encouraging the use of technological advances, including but not limited to video conferencing/Skype, Internet, the fax machine, and the more basic use of the telephone can go a long way in keeping much needed funds focused on leadership and teaching within the classroom where it is most required.

    I would even suggest that we look into taking this across county lines with offices kept in their respective districts to be utilized as needed.