Funding

The 2015-16 Budget Act provided $500 million in ongoing Proposition 98 funding for the Adult Education Block Grant. Each consortium received (1) maintenance of effort (MOE) funding for certain providers reflecting their 2012-13 adult education spending; and (2) additional funding based on the region’s share of statewide need for adult education, as measured by various demographic and economic indicators. (For more information about funding in 2015-16, see How Is Each Consortium’s Funding Determined?) The 2016-17 Budget Act maintains the $500 million funding level for the Adult Education Block Grant. Individual consortia receive the same allocation in 2016-17 as they received in 2015-16.

 

Provider Funding

2015-16 Funding 2016-17 Funding
Provider MOE Need-Based Totala Total
Beaumont Unified School District $369,383 $384,887 $754,270 $754,270
Lake Elsinore Unified School District $261,111 $198,800 $459,911 $459,911
Mt. San Jacinto Community College District $0 $1,160,616 $1,160,616 $1,246,429
Murrieta Valley Unified School District $220,008 $83,500 $303,508 $303,508
Temecula Valley Unified School District $91,893 $67,113 $159,006 $159,006
Riverside County Office of Education $0 $384,804 $384,804 $384,804
San Jacinto Unified School District $85,697 $193,740 $279,437 $279,437
Perris Union High School District $121,173 $114,508 $235,681 $235,681
Banning Unified School District $89,003 $85,526 $174,529 $174,529
Hemet Unified School District $474,991 $122,800 $597,791 $597,791
Consortium Total $1,713,259 $2,796,294 $4,509,553 $4,595,366

Enrollment

Consortia reported to the state their 2015-16 enrollment by member type. Member types include schools (school districts, county offices of education, and joint powers agreements between schools, or JPAs) and community colleges. Members reported enrollment in four primary instructional areas: elementary and secondary basic skills (reading, writing, and mathematics), English as a second language (ESL), career technical education (CTE), and programs for adults with disabilities (AWD). In addition, members reported enrollment in three other areas: workforce re-entry programs, pre-apprenticeship programs, and programs to help children succeed in school (Other). Data are self-reported and may be incomplete.


Enrollment by Member Type

Mouse over pie to see reported totals by provider-type.

2015-16

Enrollment by Instructional Area

Mouse over pie to see reported totals by instructional area.

2015-16

Enrollment by Provider and Instructional Area

Click on a provider to see enrollment by instructional area.

Provider Enrollment
Schools
Lake Elsinore Unified School District 2,225
English as a Second Language 1,401
Basic Skills 779
Career Technical Education 45
Beaumont Unified School District 1,223
English as a Second Language 749
Basic Skills 393
Career Technical Education 81
Hemet Unified School District 791
Basic Skills 592
English as a Second Language 169
Career Technical Education 30
Riverside County Office of Education 712
Basic Skills 561
Career Technical Education 123
Workforce programs for older adults 28
Murrieta Valley Unified School District 637
English as a Second Language 343
Basic Skills 294
Perris Union High School District 610
Basic Skills 610
Banning Unified School District 318
Basic Skills 318
San Jacinto Unified School District 307
Basic Skills 307
Temecula Valley Unified School District 196
Basic Skills 196
Community Colleges
Mt. San Jacinto Community College District 2,639
English as a Second Language 2,017
Basic Skills 622
Consortium Total: 9,658


To determine need-based consortia funding in 2015-16, the California Community College Chancellor, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Executive Director of the State Board of Education considered the demographic variables below. For more information about the formula, see How Did State Education Leaders Calculate Need-Based Funding in 2015-16?


Difference from State Rate


Southwest Riverside Demographic Data

  Consortium State
Demographic Variables Count Rate Count Rate
Unemployed 42,527 7% 1,553,873 5%
Limited English Speaking Ability 35,683 6% 3,471,803 12%
No H.S. Diploma (or Equivalent) 84,933 14% 4,694,321 16%
7th Grade Education or Lower 26,101 5% 2,029,047 7%
Below Federal Poverty Level 57,671 10% 2,615,894 9%

 

For additional information, including each consortium’s regional plan, see the California Community Colleges and California Department of Education AEBG website at http://aebg.cccco.edu/.