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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Heaton
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/13/07
02/25/07 HB 796/aHAFC
SHORT TITLE Extending Public School Year
SB
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz/Aguilar
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$62,000.0 $62,000.0 $124,000.0 Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates SB 728
Relates to HB 501
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HAFC Amendment
The House Appropriations and Finance Committee amendment to House Bill 796 removes the
appropriation.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 796 appropriates $62 million from the general fund to the State Equalization
Guarantee for the purpose of extending the school year by five instructional days.
House Bill 796 extends the school year by increasing the annual minimum number of hours
regular students are required to be in school and increases the length of the school year by five
full instructional days from 180 days to 185 days.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $62 million contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall revert
to the general fund.
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House Bill 796/aHAFC – Page
2
Since FY04 the Legislature has appropriated $208.2 million for salary increases and funding of
the three-tier career ladder with no corresponding increase in instructional time for students.
Funding is also included in the General Appropriations Act for FY08 to implement the $50,000
minimum salary for Level 3-A teachers.
The bill increases the length of school year from 180 days to 185 days. PED notes that this will
increase school district and charter school salaries and fixed costs relating to an instructional day
by 3 percent. This however does not take into account the commitment made by the Legislature
noted above.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HB 796 increases the length of the school year as follows:
•
Full-day kindergarten (5.5 hours per day) from 990 hours to 1,017.5 hours;
•
Grades one through six (5.5 hours per day) from 990 hours to 1,017.5 hours;
•
Grades seven through twelve (6 hours per day) from 1,080 hours to 1110 hours.
At present, some districts with the approval of the department shift the number of daily
classroom hours around to allow for additional teacher prep time, professional development time
or other school uses. Although meeting the minimum number of contact hours for school
directed programs, these practices tend to reduce the actual number of days children are in the
classroom.
The challenge of extending the time students spend in schools is being addressed in a number of
ways in New Mexico. In FY07, for example, the $2.4 million appropriated for the Schools In
Need Of Improvement Fund was dedicated to extended day and extended year programs for
intensive interventions for students not meeting proficiency in reading and/or mathematics in
high-needs schools and several initiatives aimed at extending school time are being considered
during the 2007 legislative session including funding for the Schools In Need Of Improvement
Fund and the Kindergarten Three-Plus program. While these initiatives differ in fundamental
ways, they all focus on extending the number of school days in high-poverty and high-need
schools.
OEA reports that education reformers have long suggested that extending the time that students
spend in school is one key strategy for raising student achievement. In 1894, the U.S.
Commissioner of Education argued that it was a mistake not to keep urban schools open for the
entire year. One hundred years later, in 1994, the National Education Commission on Time and
Learning, for example, published an influential report entitled “Prisoners of Time" that argued
that American education was built on a foundation of sand by relying on a uniform six-hour day
and a 180-day year.
In 2005, Massachusetts became the first state in the nation to implement a systematic effort to
expand learning time as a strategy to close the achievement gap. Massachusetts chose to make
this effort because they believed that more time in school could promote greater learning in the
following ways:
•
A longer school day provides more opportunity for longer classes, particularly in core
academic subjects, which allows students more time to practice and master key skills and
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House Bill 796/aHAFC – Page
3
fully explore lessons and materials.
•
Additional time can offer teachers extra periods for planning and professional development,
both essential for enhancing teacher quality.
•
An extended schedule can enable schools to offer valuable enrichment activities such as art,
drama, music, physical education, and languages, which broaden and enrich learning and
engage students more deeply in school.
•
The extra hours make it possible for schools to allocate time for one-on-one or small group
tutoring sessions to address specific student learning needs.
•
School reform is a process that often takes several years to yield significant results, so it is
essential to secure long-term commitments from political leaders and a sustainable funding
and evaluation strategy.
•
To maximize impact, school reform efforts cannot be isolated to a small number of schools.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Current statute (22-8-9.A.1-2): (1) a school year consisting of at least one hundred eighty full
instructional days or the equivalent thereof, exclusive of any release time for in-service training;
or (2) a variable school year consisting of a minimum number of instructional hours established
by the department.
For at least 25 years, the Public Education Department (PED) has permitted local school districts
to submit for approval a four-day week in which extended hours would be added to each of the
four days so that these schools would meet or exceed the minimum instructional hours required
by the PED.
AHO/PA/mt:csd