Incredibly, the Westhampton Beach UFSD is petitioning the Commissioner of Education to change the Seneca Falls formula so that the result is a higher regular education tuition rate for grades 7-12, increasing costs for districts like East Moriches.
So many people (and you know who you are) denied the significance I raised of the peculiar difference between the K-6 tuition rate and 7-12 tuition rate in WHB (see my Update in the Archives from March 27, 2007). “Crazy”, they said. “You are barking up the wrong tree”, they said. Still, I knew something was up.
Now we know.
After the state changed the special education tuition formula to a single tier from a two tier system (something that WHB admitted caught them by surprise), WHB started capturing more high school instruction costs into special education (perform a review of expenses on the WHB State Aid website comparing 2007-08 actuals to 2003-04). Why did they do this? Because the single tier system wasn’t providing the same revenue stream the two tier system was providing.
What was the effect? LOWER regular high school tuition, to the point that elementary tuition rates blew past high school tuition rates (something very uncommon), by $2000 per student. That would normally have been good news for sending districts like East Moriches, but as with most good things, they come to an end. In this case, the entity trying to end it is WHB, at the expense of East Moriches.
In yesterday’s Southampton Press there was an article describing how WHB, having adopted a budget proposal that could lead to a 7.67% increase in property taxes, thinks that is too much to place on the local community, so instead they will petition the SED Commissioner to change the formula again so that the new “maximum allowable tuition rate” (remember that phrase?) increases, costing districts like East Moriches more money.
Three years ago I predicted WHB tuition would be over $20,000 per student this year. I was wrong, but now we know why, and we also know WHB agrees with me.