California School Districts: Governance and Funding

California operates one of the largest and most complex public school district systems in the United States, encompassing more than 1,000 local educational agencies serving approximately 6 million K–12 students. This page covers the structural governance framework, constitutional and statutory funding mechanisms, operational boundaries, and key decision points that define how school districts function within California's broader government architecture.

Definition and Scope

A California school district is a local educational agency (LEA) established under the California Education Code as a quasi-municipal corporation with independent taxing authority, an elected governing board, and statutory responsibility for the delivery of public education within a defined geographic attendance area. Districts are classified into three primary structural types:

  1. Elementary school districts — Serve grades kindergarten through 8, operating independently of secondary instruction.
  2. High school districts — Serve grades 9 through 12 within attendance zones that may overlap elementary district boundaries.
  3. Unified school districts — Serve grades K–12 under a single governance structure, consolidating elementary and secondary administration.

The California Department of Education (CDE) maintains the official register of LEAs and administers statewide accountability, curriculum frameworks, and federal program compliance. District boundaries are established by county committees on school district organization and are subject to state review under Education Code §§ 35700–35720.

This page is limited in scope to K–12 school districts operating under California law. Community college districts, which operate under a parallel but distinct statutory framework, are addressed separately at California Community College Districts. Federal education policy from the U.S. Department of Education applies concurrently with state law but is not covered in this reference. Charter schools authorized by local boards are subject to additional provisions under the California Charter Schools Act of 1992 and fall partially outside unified district governance structures.

How It Works

Governance

Each district is governed by a locally elected board of education, typically composed of 5 members serving 4-year staggered terms. Board members are elected in odd-year general elections under the California Elections Code. The board holds fiduciary and policy authority over the district, including adoption of the annual budget, approval of collective bargaining agreements, and superintendent appointment.

The Superintendent of Public Instruction, a statewide constitutional officer described in detail at California Superintendent of Public Instruction, sets academic standards and oversees CDE's regulatory role over all districts.

Funding Structure

California school district funding is governed by Proposition 98 (California Proposition 13 established the local property tax constraints that made state-level funding formulas necessary) and the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), enacted in 2013 under Assembly Bill 97. The LCFF replaced categorical grant programs with a base grant structure adjusted for pupil characteristics.

The LCFF allocates funds through three components:

  1. Base grant — A per-pupil allocation adjusted by grade span (K–3, 4–6, 7–8, and 9–12), with K–3 receiving an additional grade span adjustment of approximately 10.4% (California Department of Finance, LCFF Overview).
  2. Supplemental grant — An additional 20% of the base grant per pupil for English learners, low-income students, and foster youth.
  3. Concentration grant — An additional 50% of the base grant per pupil when the combined count of unduplicated supplemental-eligible pupils exceeds 55% of total enrollment.

Property tax revenue flows to districts through county tax collectors, with shortfalls relative to the LCFF target made up by state General Fund appropriations. Under California Proposition 13, assessed property value growth is capped at 2% annually, which structurally limits local property tax growth and increases state-share dependency.

The California Department of Finance coordinates state budget allocations, while the State Controller's Office releases actual apportionments to districts on a monthly schedule.

Common Scenarios

Basic Aid Districts: Approximately 10% of California districts generate sufficient local property tax revenue to meet or exceed their LCFF target without state General Fund support. These "basic aid" or "community-funded" districts retain excess local property tax revenue, which can create significant per-pupil spending disparities compared to state-funded districts.

Fiscal Crisis: Districts unable to adopt a positive budget or facing insolvency are subject to intervention by the county superintendent of schools and ultimately the California Department of Education. The state may appoint a trustee and advance emergency loans, as occurred in Oakland Unified School District, which received a $100 million state emergency loan in 2003 (State Controller's Office).

Local Control and Accountability Plans (LCAPs): Every district must adopt a three-year LCAP outlining annual goals tied to eight state priorities, including student achievement, engagement, and school climate. County offices of schools review and approve LCAPs before they take effect.

Labor Negotiations: Teacher and classified employee contracts are negotiated under the Educational Employment Relations Act, administered by the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). Impasse procedures can trigger state mediation or fact-finding before strike action is legally permissible.

Decision Boundaries

Several structural thresholds determine district governance and funding eligibility:

The contrast between unified and non-unified districts is most operationally significant at the boundary between elementary and high school attendance zones. A student residing in an elementary district boundary that does not align with a unified district feeds into a separate high school district governance structure, meaning the student's education is governed by two distinct elected boards, two separate collective bargaining units, and two independent budget processes across their K–12 enrollment.

The broader landscape of local government in California — including how school districts interact with county offices and other special districts — is indexed at /index.

References