14 Addendum.Item #14 - Five-Year Forecast
PREPARED BY: Gitta Ungvari
Finance Director
Reviewed by: Town Manager, Town Attorney, and Assistant Town Manager
110 E. Main Street Los Gatos, CA 95030 ● (408) 354-6832
www.losgatosca.gov
TOWN OF LOS GATOS
COUNCIL AGENDA REPORT
MEETING DATE: 02/20/2024 ITEM NO: 14 ADDENDUM
DATE: February 16, 2024
TO: Mayor and Town Council
FROM: Laurel Prevetti, Town Manager
SUBJECT: Review the Five-Year Forecast (Fiscal Year 2024/25 -FY 2028/29) and the
Finance Commission Recommendations, Determine Key Assumptions for the
Five- Year Forecast, and Provide Direction for the Preparation of the FY
2024/25 Operating Budget
REMARKS:
Attachment 3 contains Santa Clara County Letter to Senator Cortese regarding the Governor’s
budget proposal on charter schools’ eligibility for Educational Revenue Augmentation Fund
(ERAF). The County shared this letter with the Town and other Santa Clara County Cities late
afternoon on Thursday February 15, 2024.
Attachments previously distributed with the Staff Report:
1. Five-Year Forecast Report to the Finance Commission with Attachments 1 through 6
2. Public comment received after the Finance Commission’s February 12, 2024 meeting and
prior to 11 a.m. on February 15, 2024
Attachment distributed with this Addendum:
3. County of Santa Clara Letter to Senator Cortese Regarding Excess ERAF
ATTACHMENT 3
Impacts of Re-Directing Excess ERAF from Counties
BACKGROUND
The California Constitution requires the State to
guarantee that schools receive a certain
minimum level of funding. In 1992, to reduce
the impact of this mandate on the State general
fund, the State required each county to
establish an Educational Revenue Augmentation
Fund (ERAF) where local property tax dollars are
taken from the county, cities, and special
districts, deposited in ERAF, and used to bring
school districts up to their minimum funding
levels. Importantly, despite its name, ERAF does
not increase school funding—it merely offsets
the State’s school funding obligations, dollar-
for-dollar. When more local property tax
revenue is diverted to ERAF than is needed to
meet school districts’ minimum funding needs,
that revenue is deemed “excess ERAF” and
returned to the county, cities, and special
districts whose taxes were diverted to ERAF.
CHARTER SCHOOL FUNDING
Charter schools also have minimum funding
guarantees, but they do not receive ERAF.i
Instead, they receive “in lieu” payments from
their host school district. If the in lieu payment
is not enough to meet the charter school’s
minimum funding level, the State makes up the
difference.
PROBLEM
The California Department of Finance (DOF) has
engaged in numerous efforts over many years
to shift excess ERAF away from local
governments to benefit the State budget.
One of DOF’s recent efforts was to assert,
without any legal basis, that charter schools
receive ERAF. DOF even supported the California
School Boards Association’s unsuccessful lawsuit
challenging the State Controller’s determination
that charter schools do not receive ERAF.
DOF’s response to that judicial defeat is to
propose unconstitutional budget legislation that
would give charter schools ERAF, thereby
shifting funds away from local governments.
The estimated impact to Santa Clara County
from DOF’s proposal would be $32 million per
year. Our 15 cities and 11 special districts
would also lose roughly $10 million per year.
Losing these additional local property tax
dollars would put critical safety net services—
such as behavioral health care, supportive
housing, and health services for children and
families—at significant risk.
DOF’s proposal is also unconstitutional because
Article XIII, § 25.5(a) restricts the State’s
authority to use or redirect local property taxes
from counties, cities and special districts. But
DOF seems undeterred by this inconvenient fact.
We are asking our delegation to stay very alert
for any proposed legislation entitling charter
schools to ERAF.
CONTACT
James R. Williams, County Executive
Funding At Risk for Santa Clara County Communities
Annual Revenue
Loss
County of Santa Clara $32 M
15 Cities $7.9M
11 Special Districts $2M
Total Revenue Loss $41.9M
i California School Bds. Ass’n v. Cohen, 2023 WL 4853693 (3rd Dist. Court of Appeal, unpublished) (“CSBA”). Although the
appellate decision is unpublished, it constitutes a final judicial determination that charter schools do not receive ERAF.