introduction to title i fiscal requirements presented by kristen tosh cowan, esq. brustein &...

73
Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC [email protected] Spring Forum 2011

Upload: sharlene-greene

Post on 17-Jan-2016

221 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements

Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq.

Brustein & Manasevit, [email protected]

Spring Forum 2011

Page 2: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Overview

1) LEA-to-School allocations2) Set asides3) Equitable Services allocation 4) Carryover 5) Comparability6) Reauthorization Predictions

2

Page 3: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Resources -- Allocations

Statute Section 1113

Regulations 34 CFR §200.77-78

Non-regulatory Guidance August 2003

3

Page 4: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Resources – Cross-cutting

“Title I Fiscal Issues” Feb 2008www.ed.gov/programs/titleiparta/ fiscalguid.doc

Consolidating funds in schoolwide

programs, MOE, SNS, Comparability, Grantbacks, Carryover

4

Page 5: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA-to-School Allocations

“Ranking and Serving” Rules 1) Identify Eligible Schools 2) Rank Schools in Order of

Poverty 3) Serve Schools Strictly in

Accordance with Rank

5

Page 6: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

STEP 1: IDENTIFY ELIGIBLE SCHOOLS

6

Page 7: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Eligible School Attendance Areas

Percentage of children from low-income families who reside in area . . . .

AT LEAST AS HIGH AS . . . .

percentage of children from low-income families in LEA

7

Page 8: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA Discretion: Eligibility

“35 Percent Rule” May designate as eligible Must still serve in order

8

Page 9: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA Discretion: Eligibility

“Grandfathering” option Continue if served last year But, only continue for one year

9

Page 10: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

5 Poverty Measures:

1. Census data2. Free and reduced lunch3. TANF4. Medicaid eligibility5. Composite of above

10

Page 11: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

STEP 2: RANK ELIGIBLE SCHOOLS IN ORDER OF POVERTY

11

Page 12: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Ranking and Serving Exceeding 75% poverty

Strictly by poverty Without regard to gradespan

At or below 75% poverty May rank by gradespan

12

Page 13: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Exception: NO Rank & Serve if

Small LEA exclusion If <1000 students

One school at each gradespan

13

Page 14: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

STEP 3: SERVE SCHOOLS STRICTLY IN ORDER OF RANK

14

Page 15: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Allocation to Schools BUT first, calculate set-asides Allocate to schools based on total

# of students from low income families residing in area (including nonpublic)

Discretion on amount of PPA Higher PPAs must be in higher schools

on ranked list

15

Page 16: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Allocations given without regard to schoolwide or

targeted assistance model

Title I funding . . . . . . To school based on poverty

. . . To student based on academics

Page 17: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

“125 Percent” Rule

If serve any school <35% Then PPAs for all schools must be

at least 125% of LEA’s PPA under Title I allocation Entire LEA Title I-A Grant # of low income on census

17

Page 18: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

EXAMPLE:

$1,000,000 total Title I grant 2,000 poverty students

= $500/ student PPA

If serve school <35% poverty, $500 x 1.25 = $625 PPA

18

Page 19: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Exception: Rank & Serve “Skip” school, if:

1. Comparability met2. Receiving supplemental state/local

funds used in Title I-like program3. Supp. State/local funds meet or exceed

amount would be received under Title I

Still count and serve nonpublic in area

19

Page 20: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Title I Set-Asides

Page 21: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA MUST reserve specific percentage:

20% choice transportation and SES 1% parental involvement 10% professional dev (if LEA ID)

21

Page 22: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA MUST reserve but not specific percentage: Administration (public and private) Homeless Neglected & delinquent

22

Page 23: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA MAY reserve:

Incentives to teachers in ID schools (<5%)

Professional development “other authorized activities”

Summer school Preschool Districtwide program

23

Page 24: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

CAUTION:

DON’T CIRCUMVENT “RANKING AND

SERVING” RULES!

Page 25: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Calculating % set asides

Take off entire LEA grant Transferability:

Includes transferred amounts Carryover:

Does not include carry over (apply % only in first year available)

25

Page 26: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Example

Title I, Part A = $500,000 Transferred $30,000 from Title II Carried over $50,000 from prior

year

Each % set aside applies to $530,000

26

Page 27: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Funds for Supp Ed Services and Choice Transportation

Amount equal to 20% of LEA allocation

(unless lesser amount needed) To pay transportation for choice To satisfy all requests for SES

services Both

27

Page 28: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

If no SES, then 20% on choice

If no choice, then 20% on SES

If both, then minimum of 5% for choice, 5% for supp services, and 10% for either

28

Page 29: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Credit for “Parent Outreach”

Allow limited amount of funds for “parent outreach” to count toward 20%

Capped at 0.2% of LEA Part A grant May spend more for outreach, but only

0.2% counts toward 20% EX - $1 million LEA grant;

20% = $200,000 0.2% = $2,000 can count toward $200,000

29

Page 30: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

What costs count as “parent outreach”?

Parent notices, communication through the media, internet, and community, displaying information on LEA’s website, and parent fairs

Allowance, not a requirement

30

Page 31: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

“Amount equal to 20%” May use Title I, Part A; school

improvement (sect. 1003); ARRA transferability

State, local, or private funds

31

Page 32: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

If use Title I Funds, from where?

Off the top of LEA allocation OR from individual school allocations? Both permitted If school in corrective action or

restruct, <15%

32

Page 33: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Use 20% “unless a lesser amount is needed”

How do you know if less is needed?

33

Page 34: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

To spend less than 20%, LEA must: 200.48(d)(2)(i)

1. Partner, to extent practicable, with outside groups (CBO, FBO, etc.)

2. Send timely, accurate notice to parents

3. Ensure SES sign-up forms given directly to all eligible students/ parents

4. Ensure SES sign-up forms made widely available through broad dissemination (Internet, other media, public agencies)

34

Page 35: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

5. Provide (at a minimum) two enrollment windows at separate points in school year of sufficient length

6. Ensure SES providers are given access to school facilities, using a fair, open and objective process, on same basis as others

35

Page 36: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Does LEA need SEA’s permission before reallocating the 20%?

NO!

36

Page 37: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

LEA must document and notify SEA!

Before reallocating remainder of 20%, LEA must:

Maintain records demonstrating it has met criteria

Notify the SEA that it met criteria Notify SEA of amount of remainder

it intends to spend on other allowable activities

37

Page 38: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

SEA monitors 20% compliance through: (200.48(d)(3))

Regular monitoring (on multi-year cycles) Ensure 6 criteria are met

More frequent monitoring For LEAs that have spent “significant portion” of

20% on other activities AND subject of “multiple complaints, supported by credible evidence,” regarding implementation of choice or SES

SEA must complete its review by the beginning of the next school year

38

Page 39: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Consequences for non-compliance200.48(d)(4)

If SEA finds LEA did not meet all 6 criteria, then LEA must in the subsequent year: Spend amount equal to the remainder

of 20% in the subsequent year on choice/ SES, in addition to new 20%, OR

Meet all 6 criteria and obtain permission from the SEA before spending less than full 20% in subsequent year.

39

Page 40: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

How to reallocate?

If took school allocations, then reallocated to those schools

Subject to equitable participation of private school students

40

Page 41: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Set Aside for Parent Involvement

For LEAs with Part A allocations >$500,000

1% minimum reserved Proportional amount to private

students 95% of remainder to schools 5% of remainder kept at LEA

41

Page 42: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Equitable Services for Private School Students

Page 43: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

43

Equitable Services:Deriving Allocation

General Formula: Based on number of:

1. Private school students 2. From low-income families3. Who reside in Title I-participating

public school attendance areas

Page 44: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

44

Calculate Allocation for Instruction:

1. Identify eligible school attendance areas2. Rank in order of poverty3. Strictly serve in rank order (i.e., ID who is

“Participating Public School”)4. Calculate PPA for each area5. Derive allocation amount for each area

must include nonpublic low-income #

6. Reserve nonpublic amount PPA x # of nonpublic low-income students who

reside in participating public sch area

Page 45: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

45

Reservation for districtwide instruction

If LEA reserves for “districtwide instructional programs for public elementary and secondary”

Then proportional amount goes to nonpublic

34 CFR sect 200.64(a)(2)(i)(A)

Page 46: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

46

Example

LEA reserves $500,000 for districtwide reading initiative

Of all low-income in LEA residing in participating attend areas, 5% are private

5% of $500,000 to private allocation

Page 47: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

47

Applies to: Summer school After school programs Reading coaches

DOES NOT APPLY TO: SES/ Choice (20%) Preschool

Page 48: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

48

Reservation for teachers and families

If LEA reserves funds for parental involvement or professional development

Then proportional amount to nonpublic

34 CFR sect 200.65(a)

Page 49: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

49

Example LEA reserves 1% of $500,000

allocation for parental involvement, or $5,000.

Of all low-income families residing in participating attend area, 6% are private. Then 6% of $5,000 used for families of participating private school students.

Page 50: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Carryover

General Rule: May carryover up to 15% of Title I, Part A

Reallocated by state if exceeds

Waiver

50

Page 51: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Use of Carryover Funds

Flexible 3 Options:

1. Put back in LEA formula & redistribute2. Designate for particular LEA activities3. (Allow school to retain)

Cannot use in ineligible school

51

Page 52: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

3 Pillars of Fiscal Accountability

1. Maintenance of Effort2. Supplement not

Supplant3. Comparability

Page 53: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Heightened Federal Scrutiny on Comparability!!

Common finding of USDE Program Reviewers

Many serious findings in OIG Audits Focus of “equity” initiatives

53

Page 54: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

General Rule - §1120A(c) An LEA may receive Title I, Part A

funds only if it uses state and local funds to provide services in Title I schools that, taken as a whole, are at least comparable to the services provided in non-Title I schools.

Reasonable variance is ok (10%)

54

Page 55: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

If all are Title I schools, all must be “substantially comparable.”

Reasonable variance ok (>10%)

55

Page 56: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Timing

Common Finding!

Guidance: Must be annual determination

Review for current year and make adjustments for current year

56

Page 57: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Written Assurances

LEA must file with SEA written assurances of policies for equivalence: LEA-wide salary schedule Teachers, administrators, and other staff Curriculum materials and instructional

supplies Must keep records to document

implemented and “equivalence achieved”

57

Page 58: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Demonstrate “equivalence achieved” through:

Student/instructional staff ratios; Student/instructional staff salary ratios; Expenditures per pupil; or A resource allocation plan based on

student characteristics such as poverty, LEP, disability, etc. (i.e., by formula)

Need only meet under 1 approach

58

Page 59: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

How to measure??

Compare: Average of all non-Title I schoolsto Each Title I school

59

Page 60: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

For example: Using student/ instructional staff ratios Average of all

non-Title I schools = 10:1

Title I schools: Lincoln: 10:1 Washington: 9:1 Madison: 11:1 Jefferson: 12:1

60

Page 61: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Basis for evaluation: Compare: Grade-spans Large schools Small schools

61

Page 62: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Does not apply if LEA has:

Only 1 school Only 1 school at each gradespan

62

Page 63: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Exclusions:

Federal Funds Private Funds

63

Page 64: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Exclusions:

Need not include unpredictable changes in students enrollment or personnel assignments that occur after the start of a school year

64

Page 65: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Exclusions: LEA may exclude state/ local funds expended for:

Language instruction for LEP students

Excess costs of providing services to students with disabilities

Supplemental programs that meet the intent and purposes of Title I

Staff salary differentials for years of employment

65

Page 66: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Who is “instructional staff”? Consistent between Title I and

non-Title I

Teachers (art, music, phys ed), guidance counselors, speech therapists, librarians, social workers, psychologists

Paraprofessionals – ED: up to SEA/ LEA

66

Page 67: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

How to calculate in a SWP?

Problem (theoretically): Cannot exclude state and local funds Cannot identify teachers paid with

state and local funds Use (non-federal) expenditures per

student

67

Page 68: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

How to calculate with charter schools?

Charters must be included (if not independent LEAs)

Problem: No LEA control over staffing

Use (non-federal) expenditures per student

68

Page 69: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

How will Reauthorization impact Title I Fiscal Requirements?

Page 70: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Reauthorization Predictions

Comparability Close loophole of excluding salary

differential to reflect seniority Move to measuring non-federal

expenditures/ student Supplement not Supplant

Change to reviewing total amount of funding, not individual expenditure?

70

Page 71: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Reauthorization Predictions

Choice/ SES – Unlikely 20% minimum mandate One option of many Target to underperforming subgroup

Financial incentives for teachers and students

71

Page 72: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

Reauthorization Predictions

No significant changes to: Ranking & serving rules Equitable services Consolidating funds in schoolwides Time & effort

72

Page 73: Introduction to Title I Fiscal Requirements Presented by Kristen Tosh Cowan, Esq. Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC ktoshcowan@bruman.com Spring Forum 2011

This presentation is intended solely to provide general information and does not constitute legal advice or a legal service.  This presentation does not create a client-lawyer relationship with Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC and, therefore, carries none of the protections under the D.C. Rules of Professional Conduct.  Attendance at this presentation, a later review of any printed or electronic materials, or any follow-up questions or communications arising out of this presentation with any attorney at Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC does not create an attorney-client relationship with Brustein & Manasevit, PLLC.  You should not take any action based upon any information in this presentation without first consulting legal counsel familiar with your particular circumstances.

73