Latest news with #SchoolResourceStandard

Sydney Morning Herald
18-05-2025
- Business
- Sydney Morning Herald
State government's building obsession could rob Peta to pay Paul
Last August, towards the end of her first year as premier, Jacinta Allan reached a fork in the road. A review of health services commissioned under her predecessor Daniel Andrews recommended the amalgamation of Victoria's 76 providers into just 12 health services – six for Melbourne and six for the regions. With the state confronting soaring government debt, forecast to reach $187.8 billion by June 2028, considering efficiencies must have seemed an obvious choice. After all, why does Victoria have 76 providers when NSW has 17 and Queensland 16? Yet when The Age revealed the proposal, Allan was spooked and it became the review's only recommendation to be knocked back. Instead, as we reported later, she promised hospitals $1.5 billion in additional funding that the government didn't have in its coffers. That marked a parting of ways for Allan and then-treasurer Tim Pallas. This year's state budget, to be delivered on Tuesday, will be the first for new Treasurer Jaclyn Symes, and for the first time Allan's priorities in government are laid bare. Symes has promised to address runaway growth in the size of the public service. But the review commissioned into the sector, headed by former top bureaucrat Helen Silver, will not report back until June 30, too late to be incorporated into Tuesday's announcements. What is also clear is that both education and health will be squeezed as the budget focuses on big-ticket infrastructure projects and crime. In the end, healthcare providers have been rearranged into 12 'networks', with individual services' boards left in place. But that means a reckoning over funding – and cuts – must come. Loading The Age is concerned that the state budget will bring cuts made with the chief aim of robbing Peta the teacher or nurse to pay Paul the construction worker. Nowhere is this problem clearer than in the treatment of our state schools. Our revelation that last year's budget quietly delayed $2.4 billion in funding needed to meet the School Resource Standard set out in the Gonski reforms to state education, putting us years behind Queensland and NSW, strongly suggests that important contributions to our children's futures are being diverted to keep the government's Big Build above water. The weekend's announcement of free public transport for children over the weekend will no doubt be welcomed by school families but does not fill the hole being left in their education.

The Age
18-05-2025
- Business
- The Age
State government's building obsession could rob Peta to pay Paul
Last August, towards the end of her first year as premier, Jacinta Allan reached a fork in the road. A review of health services commissioned under her predecessor Daniel Andrews recommended the amalgamation of Victoria's 76 providers into just 12 health services – six for Melbourne and six for the regions. With the state confronting soaring government debt, forecast to reach $187.8 billion by June 2028, considering efficiencies must have seemed an obvious choice. After all, why does Victoria have 76 providers when NSW has 17 and Queensland 16? Yet when The Age revealed the proposal, Allan was spooked and it became the review's only recommendation to be knocked back. Instead, as we reported later, she promised hospitals $1.5 billion in additional funding that the government didn't have in its coffers. That marked a parting of ways for Allan and then-treasurer Tim Pallas. This year's state budget, to be delivered on Tuesday, will be the first for new Treasurer Jaclyn Symes, and for the first time Allan's priorities in government are laid bare. Symes has promised to address runaway growth in the size of the public service. But the review commissioned into the sector, headed by former top bureaucrat Helen Silver, will not report back until June 30, too late to be incorporated into Tuesday's announcements. What is also clear is that both education and health will be squeezed as the budget focuses on big-ticket infrastructure projects and crime. In the end, healthcare providers have been rearranged into 12 'networks', with individual services' boards left in place. But that means a reckoning over funding – and cuts – must come. Loading The Age is concerned that the state budget will bring cuts made with the chief aim of robbing Peta the teacher or nurse to pay Paul the construction worker. Nowhere is this problem clearer than in the treatment of our state schools. Our revelation that last year's budget quietly delayed $2.4 billion in funding needed to meet the School Resource Standard set out in the Gonski reforms to state education, putting us years behind Queensland and NSW, strongly suggests that important contributions to our children's futures are being diverted to keep the government's Big Build above water. The weekend's announcement of free public transport for children over the weekend will no doubt be welcomed by school families but does not fill the hole being left in their education.

The Age
11-05-2025
- Business
- The Age
Victoria secretly slices $2.4b from public schools, delays funding promise
In November 2023, the Victorian and Commonwealth governments signed an agreement which committed Victoria to provide 75 per cent of the SRS by 2028. Cabinet-in-confidence documents reveal Victoria quietly abandoned this commitment four months later and is now not planning to reach the benchmark until 2031. This puts Victoria three years behind Queensland, which in March this year agreed to reach the benchmark by 2028, and six years behind NSW, which brought forward more funding for its public schools to reach the benchmark this year. A federal government source with knowledge of the Commonwealth's negotiations with the states and territories, but unable to discuss them publicly, confirmed this is why Victoria will receive less money than Queensland over the next decade. The difference in dollar terms to Victorian schools is initially small. Under the government's revised timeline, Victoria is this year providing its state schools about $35 million less than what they had previously committed. By 2027, the difference in annual state funding is more than $300 million, and by 2028, it is half-a-billion dollars. The cumulative impact across the forward estimates of the state budget is $1 billion, and by 2031, the year when Victoria will reach the 75 per cent benchmark, the total shortfall is calculated to be $2.4 billion. When the resultant reduction in federal funding is added, Victoria's state schools will be left nearly $3 billion worse off. This year's combined, state and federal government funding for Victorian state schools is about $13 billion, which is 90 per cent of the SRS. Allan, Pallas, ministers Danny Pearson, Symes and Carroll, their respective chiefs of staff and senior bureaucrats from the departments of premier and cabinet, treasury and finance and education are recorded in cabinet committee minutes as being at the March 20, 2024, meeting where the decision was taken to delay Victoria's commitment. The Budget and Finance Committee, the new name given to the Expenditure Review Committee, is the most senior government forum for making budget decisions. Government documents show Carroll proposed a compromise which would have meant Victoria reached the 75 per cent benchmark by 2029, booked more modest savings and provided additional funds ahead of the next pay deal with teachers, which is due to be negotiated this year. His proposal was not supported by the premier or then-treasurer. The School Resource Standard is only a measure of recurrent funding and does not take into account capital investments by governments in new and upgraded schools. A spokesperson for Minister Carroll said Victoria's school-building program, which will result in 19 new schools opening next year, was the nation's largest school-building program. 'We will fund government schools at 75 per cent of the SRS, delivering increased funding in stages during the term of the agreement,' the spokesperson said. 'The Victorian government is currently finalising these discussions with the Commonwealth. As they are ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further.' Loading Carroll declined to say whether he had opposed the cuts. A spokesperson for federal Education Minister Jason Clare confirmed that a new, 10-year bilateral agreement between the state and the Commonwealth setting out the timeframe for Victorian state schools to receive full SRS funding had not been finalised. 'The Commonwealth will continue to work with the Victorian government on their associated bilateral agreement which will set out the funding trajectory over the life of the agreement,' the spokesman said. When asked if the federal government would seek to convince Victoria to reinstate its commitment to fully fund state schools by 2028, the spokesperson replied: 'The minister will not be negotiating this bilateral agreement through the media.' Loading State opposition education spokeswoman Jess Wilson said this month's state budget would test Carroll's authority within government to reverse the funding call. 'These secret cuts have exposed Labor's utter hypocrisy on public school funding and their failure to provide Victorian students with the education they need and deserve,' she said. 'Whilst spending years demanding the Commonwealth lift their proportion of government school funding beyond agreed levels, the Allan Labor government was secretly cutting billions from public schools.' The Gonski education reforms, named after businessman David Gonski, are centred on a needs-based funding model in which schools are provided a base rate of funding per student and additional loadings to address social, economic and cultural disadvantages. Albanese declared during the federal election campaign he had secured support from all state and territories to fully fund the Gonski model. Victoria's altered funding trajectory for state schools means that instead of delivering a steady uplift of between $100 million and $200 million a year, funding will stay flat until 2029. An additional $1 billion will then be dumped into the system by 2031. Confirmation that Victoria is Australia's laggard state in adopting the Gonski reforms is at odds with its claim to be the 'Education State'. The funding delay maintains the current divide between government and non-government schools, which already receive 100 per cent of their SRS funding from state and Commonwealth governments.

Sydney Morning Herald
11-05-2025
- Business
- Sydney Morning Herald
Victoria secretly slices $2.4b from public schools, delays funding promise
In November 2023, the Victorian and Commonwealth governments signed an agreement which committed Victoria to provide 75 per cent of the SRS by 2028. Cabinet-in-confidence documents reveal Victoria quietly abandoned this commitment four months later and is now not planning to reach the benchmark until 2031. This puts Victoria three years behind Queensland, which in March this year agreed to reach the benchmark by 2028, and six years behind NSW, which brought forward more funding for its public schools to reach the benchmark this year. A federal government source with knowledge of the Commonwealth's negotiations with the states and territories, but unable to discuss them publicly, confirmed this is why Victoria will receive less money than Queensland over the next decade. The difference in dollar terms to Victorian schools is initially small. Under the government's revised timeline, Victoria is this year providing its state schools about $35 million less than what they had previously committed. By 2027, the difference in annual state funding is more than $300 million, and by 2028, it is half-a-billion dollars. The cumulative impact across the forward estimates of the state budget is $1 billion, and by 2031, the year when Victoria will reach the 75 per cent benchmark, the total shortfall is calculated to be $2.4 billion. When the resultant reduction in federal funding is added, Victoria's state schools will be left nearly $3 billion worse off. This year's combined, state and federal government funding for Victorian state schools is about $13 billion, which is 90 per cent of the SRS. Allan, Pallas, ministers Danny Pearson, Symes and Carroll, their respective chiefs of staff and senior bureaucrats from the departments of premier and cabinet, treasury and finance and education are recorded in cabinet committee minutes as being at the March 20, 2024, meeting where the decision was taken to delay Victoria's commitment. The Budget and Finance Committee, the new name given to the Expenditure Review Committee, is the most senior government forum for making budget decisions. Government documents show Carroll proposed a compromise which would have meant Victoria reached the 75 per cent benchmark by 2029, booked more modest savings and provided additional funds ahead of the next pay deal with teachers, which is due to be negotiated this year. His proposal was not supported by the premier or then-treasurer. The School Resource Standard is only a measure of recurrent funding and does not take into account capital investments by governments in new and upgraded schools. A spokesperson for Minister Carroll said Victoria's school-building program, which will result in 19 new schools opening next year, was the nation's largest school-building program. 'We will fund government schools at 75 per cent of the SRS, delivering increased funding in stages during the term of the agreement,' the spokesperson said. 'The Victorian government is currently finalising these discussions with the Commonwealth. As they are ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further.' Loading Carroll declined to say whether he had opposed the cuts. A spokesperson for federal Education Minister Jason Clare confirmed that a new, 10-year bilateral agreement between the state and the Commonwealth setting out the timeframe for Victorian state schools to receive full SRS funding had not been finalised. 'The Commonwealth will continue to work with the Victorian government on their associated bilateral agreement which will set out the funding trajectory over the life of the agreement,' the spokesman said. When asked if the federal government would seek to convince Victoria to reinstate its commitment to fully fund state schools by 2028, the spokesperson replied: 'The minister will not be negotiating this bilateral agreement through the media.' Loading State opposition education spokeswoman Jess Wilson said this month's state budget would test Carroll's authority within government to reverse the funding call. 'These secret cuts have exposed Labor's utter hypocrisy on public school funding and their failure to provide Victorian students with the education they need and deserve,' she said. 'Whilst spending years demanding the Commonwealth lift their proportion of government school funding beyond agreed levels, the Allan Labor government was secretly cutting billions from public schools.' The Gonski education reforms, named after businessman David Gonski, are centred on a needs-based funding model in which schools are provided a base rate of funding per student and additional loadings to address social, economic and cultural disadvantages. Albanese declared during the federal election campaign he had secured support from all state and territories to fully fund the Gonski model. Victoria's altered funding trajectory for state schools means that instead of delivering a steady uplift of between $100 million and $200 million a year, funding will stay flat until 2029. An additional $1 billion will then be dumped into the system by 2031. Confirmation that Victoria is Australia's laggard state in adopting the Gonski reforms is at odds with its claim to be the 'Education State'. The funding delay maintains the current divide between government and non-government schools, which already receive 100 per cent of their SRS funding from state and Commonwealth governments.