NC Population estimates tell different stories for LEAs

Published April 19, 2014

by Bob Luebke, Civitas Institute, April 9, 2014.

Over the last few years there have been many comments about overcrowded K-12 classrooms and understaffed schools. Often observers tie these problems to North Carolina’s growing population in ways that suggest the need for more funding for public schools. From 2004-05 to 2013-14, North Carolina’s K-12 student population increased 7.2 percent, more than 97,000 students. Will those trends continue into the future?

NC k-12 ADM population

Source: North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, Growth Analysis North Carolina, 2013[1]

Not if recent estimates from the Department of Public Instruction are correct. (See chart above.) Over the next decade, the total number of K-12 students in North Carolina will actually decline by almost 4,400 students, even when considering a significant increase in students the last two years. A review of population estimates suggests that not only does the overall population growth stop, but North Carolina’s urban and rural population trends appear to be going in two different directions. According to the data only 32 of North Carolina’s 100 counties are expected to have higher populations in 2023-24 than in 2013-14.

Such estimates have implications. First, the numbers make us realize that LEAs – like the students they seek to educate – are different. Most of the counties with declining enrollments are in rural areas, while LEAs with the greatest growth are primarily urban or suburban locations. Because education funding is tied largely to enrollment, budgets in many of the rural school districts will decline.

Second, growth patterns indicate that education dollars will continue to be funneled largely away from rural counties to the state’s larger urban areas. Barring changes, school funding formulas will work to accelerate the disparities.

Third, if uniform populations argue for similar funding and spending formulas, isn’t the converse true? Don’t differences in school populations, staffing and resources argue for different rules and greater flexibility in how LEAs spend school dollars?

North Carolina’s strong population growth is often mentioned as a reason why we must increase school funding. But North Carolina’s era of continuous population growth appears to be over. In the next decade, the number of K-12 public school students is estimated to decline by more than 4,000 students. While some counties will continue to grow, approximately two-thirds of all North Carolina counties will decline in population over the next decade. An analysis of the demographic changes shows North Carolina is becoming a state with two types of LEAs: those that are growing and those that are in population decline. Wise public policy requires that we acknowledge differences, stop forcing districts into formulas that don’t serve them well, and grant LEAs greater flexibility to educate their students.

http://www.nccivitas.org/2014/nc-population-estimates-tell-different-stories-nc-leas/

April 19, 2014 at 12:28 pm
Tom Hauck says:

Thank you for your column. To help us amateurs, kindly tell us what an LEA is. I have seen various definitions, from a single school or school district to the state public school system.

In addition to your information, I reviewed the North Carolina public and charter school system between 2000/01 to 2008/09 and found the following information, which makes it appear that prior to the Republicans taking over the emphasis was not on teachers, or their salaries, but on growing the non-teaching infrastructure.

For example, Schools grew by 13.3% or 294 (from 2,202 to 2,496); Students grew by 15.1% or 193,000 (from 1,282,576 to 1,476,566); Teachers + Assistant Principal, teaching + Teachers Assistants grew by 16.2% or 15,176 (from 93,850 to 109,026); All Others grew by 19.8% or 5,917 (from 29,850 to 35,767). The four greatest increases in All Others were Unskilled Laborers grew by 86% or 507 (from 592 to 1099); Technicians grew by 84% or 748 (from 892 to 1,640); Consultant, Supervisor grew by 79% or 644 (from 813 to 1457); Other Professionals grew by 60.6% or 2,195 (from 3,624 to 5,819).

All data is from the North Carolina Public Education website http://www.ncpublicschools.org/, an excellent source of information.