Join us:
Screenings of the documentary "Just Getting By" and other events this fall at locations across the state.
See dates and times
See dates and times
Whatever Montpelier did this year about education taxes was going to be a can-kicking exercise. By overriding the governor’s veto of the so-called “yield bill,” which sets tax rates for the coming year, the Legislature avoided a protracted fight over how far to kick the can. That bought them some time—about six months. Now, let’s hope, we’ll get a serious effort to understand what’s going on with education funding before plunging ahead with solutions.
In response to the uncharacteristically large increase in school budgets for next year, the Legislature created the ambitiously named Commission on the Future of Public Education in Vermont. It is scheduled to start meeting in July.
The commission’s final report is not due until the end of 2025, which may or may not be enough time to complete the kind of top-to-bottom review of public education in Vermont outlined in the legislation. But the commission also is supposed to produce a report “containing its preliminary findings and recommendations, including short-term cost containment considerations” by December 15 of this year.
That’s not a lot of time, especially when the legislation seems to assume the commission won’t really get down to business until the fall. (“The Commission shall prepare and submit to the General Assembly the following: (1) a formal, written work plan, which shall include a communication plan to maximize public engagement, on or before September 15, 2024; …”) But cost-containment plans, even short-term ones, can do real damage if the commission and the Legislature don’t take the time to understand first what drove the cost increases.
There are at least three areas the commission should explore before considering any new controls on school budgets.
There are other avenues for the commission to pursue: the recent change in special education funding, the bad habit of buying down tax rates, numerous tweaks to the funding system that have made it more confusing to voters, and more. But whatever information the commission gathers, it should serve its primary task: understanding the problem before reaching for solutions.
I also wonder what the financial impact has been/ will be of providing more funding to independent and religious schools.
Please be sure I get a copy of anything PAI puts out on this subject.
Your final category of observations needs to be ‘unpacked’ in light of consolidation; your item two.
Forced mergers –e.g. Barre Town and City– merged two student bodies with contrasting weight imprints.
Under the old system BT was advantaged; BC was dis advantaged. Under the new regime the reverse would be true. But merger intervened. The new weights now are an amalgam of two contrasting student need populations. As a result the intended added tax capacity for the City is diluted by contrasting Town student characteristics, lower weighted average daily attendance. There is no mechanism –given merger metrics– to assure the needy student population under new weights are rewarded with additional capacity and expenditures on that student population. The politics of a merged supervisory board does assure any equitable solution.
Our Select Board spent three months working on the two million dollar Town budget in Greensboro. Our Hazen Board spent two hours on an eight million dollar budget. The State plus the administration plus an incomprehensible funding formula all collectively disempower local boards. The boards, parents, teachers and students all need to have a greater and more meaningful voice in the budgeting process.