Bipartisan group pushes for $2.2B bill to renovate, build state schools
Democrats and Republicans in the General Assembly are locked in a bitter fight over the Kirwan Commission’s plan to increase school funding by $4 billion a year to pay for programs like expanded prekindergarten.
But there is no such partisan battle over a $2 billion school construction measure. A bipartisan group of local chief executives went to Annapolis last week to push for the big increase in school construction funding.
Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young, Baltimore County Executive John A. Olszewski Jr., Howard County Executive Calvin Ball and Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman, all Democrats, joined Republican Harford County Executive Barry Glassman in testifying in favor of the “Built To Learn” act.
Over five years, the legislation would send an additional $2.2 billion to local governments to help pay for renovating and building schools.
“Baltimore City has the oldest inventory of school buildings in the state of Maryland,” Young testified before the House of Delegates Appropriations Committee. “Some schools lack heat in the winter or air conditioning in the summer. Others do not have potable water because they are old enough to have been constructed with lead water pipes.”
The additional funding would “allow us to keep our promise and ensure that our students have the healthy, modern school facilities they need and that they deserve,” Young said. The legislation was sponsored by House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, a Democrat, but it also has the support of Republican Gov. Larry Hogan.
“Schools in every county in Maryland are in desperate need of renovations,” Jones testified Thursday. “Realistically, we can’t educate kids in substandard conditions.”
Hogan’s deputy legislative officer, Mathew Palmer, wrote in submitted testimony that while Hogan has his own, similar version of the bill, he supports Jones’ legislation, as well.
“Our administration’s legislation has the same goal of meeting our school construction needs in the state and this legislation very closely models the bill we filed this year and last,” Palmer wrote. “That is why we are very supportive of House Speaker Jones’ efforts to move this important issue forward.”
As the testimony got underway, the governor’s press office sent an email with a “Bipartisanship Alert” heading, showing cartoon stick-figure of Hogan on a purple surfboard.
The $2.2 billion would come from bonds issued by the Maryland Stadium Authority. The bonds would be paid back over 30 years using $125 million a year in casino revenues set aside in a so-called education “lockbox.”