The following is a legislative update from Senate Amanda Ragan of Mason City –
Iowa’s route to a high-skill, high-wage economy depends on great local schools that prepare students for work and life. Iowans have traditionally placed a high value on quality public schools for our kids.
Unfortunately, the Senate proposal for K-12 funding will reduce opportunities again this year. SF 2164 increases state funding for local schools by only 1 percent for the 2018-19 school year. The bill was approved by the full Senate February 7 on a 29-21 vote.
When you take into account inflation, per-student funding increased by only $33 between 2008 and 2015. In fact, funding has increased only seven-tenths of 1 percent per year for seven years.
Iowa ranks 34th for percent of funds spent on K-12 in FY17, according to a National Association of State Budget Officers report.
Nearly 200 school board members, superintendents and Parents for Great Iowa Schools advocated for our kids’ education January 30 at the Statehouse. They said that they need a timely decision on state funding to plan and budget properly, and they wish we’d provide more than what is in the Senate bill so they can address local goals and needs.
They tell me schools increasingly can provide only the bare minimum with the funding they’re getting. This can be especially true in our rural areas, where the cost of busing students to the school doors really dips into the money available to educate them.
While this bill begins to address concerns about transportation expenses, it is another round of inadequate funding for our classrooms.
Here is what districts in our area would get in basic school funding under the bill:
SENATE FILE 2164 | ||
School District | State dollars for 2018-19 school year |
Change from 2017-18 school year |
Aplington-Parkersburg | 5,315,091 | -174,595 |
Clarksville | 2,206,053 | -86,610 |
Central Springs | 4,942,691 | 130,032 |
Belmond-Klemme | 5,011,377 | -141,158 |
Forest City | 6,925,232 | 23,258 |
AGWSR | 3,280,137 | 108,090 |
Clear Lake | 6,015,664 | 95,506 |
Alden | 1,630,875 | -48,865 |
Waverly-Shell Rock | 13,164,956 | 601,325 |
Cal | 1,698,106 | -16,444 |
West Fork | 3,929,892 | 31,158 |
Clarion-Goldfield-Dows | 5,373,919 | -610,619 |
North Butler | 3,529,648 | -117,427 |
Nashua-Plainfield | 3,773,657 | 5,238 |
Mason City | 24,037,222 | -724,411 |
Iowa Falls | 7,309,620 | 105,753 |
Hampton-Dumont | 8,510,815 | -139,335 |
Garner-Hayfield-Ventura | 4,338,711 | -4,002 |
Additional information
This is a legislative update from State Senator Amanda Ragan