SEC. 16.131. STUDENT SUCCESS FUND.

§ 16.131

ComplexControversial
In plain language

San Francisco establishes a Student Success Fund administered by the Department of Children, Youth, and Their Families to provide grants to schools for academic achievement and social-emotional wellness programs using the community schools framework. The city appropriates $11–60 million annually from 2023–2027, then continues with inflation adjustments through 2038, with provisions to reduce funding during budget crises or significant revenue declines.

The city is creating money—starting with $11 million in 2024 and growing to $60 million by 2027—to help San Francisco schools improve student success. Schools can apply for grants to hire coordinators and run programs that combine academic support, counseling, and community resources. The money comes from a state funding source, but if the city faces a big budget shortfall or revenue drop, it can freeze or reduce these payments. The program ends in 2038 unless voters extend it. Schools must have a team of students, parents, teachers, and community members helping to decide how to use the money, and they can't use it to replace regular teacher positions.

  • Complex:The section contains intricate fiscal provisions with conditional appropriation rules, reserve account mechanics, and multiple override scenarios (subsections d–1 through d–7) that make the funding mechanism difficult to follow.
  • Controversial:The section commits substantial ongoing city funds ($35–60 million annually) to a particular educational approach during a period of competing budget priorities, which is a subject reasonable San Franciscans debate.

AI-generated · claude-haiku-4-5 · informational only, not legal advice.

Official text

(Added by Proposition G, Approved 11/8/2022; amended by Proposition J, Approved 11/5/2024)

View official source