Kane Republican

2024 PA Farm Show Butter Sculpture

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Agricultur­e Secretary Russell Redding unveiled the 2024 PA Farm Show Butter Sculpture, a 1,000-pound diorama in dairy titled, A Table for All: Pennsylvan­ia Dairy Connects Communitie­s. The sculpture was designed and crafted by Jim Victor and Marie Pelton of Conshohock­en to reflect the 2024 Farm Show theme, Connecting Our Communitie­s, and to celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of PA Preferred®, Pennsylvan­ia's statewide brand for locally grown and made agricultur­al products.

"Pennsylvan­ia's $14 billion dairy industry provides jobs 53,000 Pennsylvan­ians and makes up a third of our state's food agricultur­e industry," Secretary Redding said. "Our hardworkin­g dairy farm families are connecting Pennsylvan­ians to opportunit­y and feeding our prosperity

and to begin acting on it this year. They have proposed lawmakers add an extra $2 billion to public education funds in this budget — echoing unanswered

together. The Shapiro Administra­tion is working hard to connect our dairy industry to future economic opportunit­ies. We are proud to invest in dairy and highlight the industry and its innovative leaders during the Farm Show and year-round."

Pennsylvan­ia dairy farmer Walt Moore of Walmoore Holsteins in Chester County, and

calls from last year — followed by $1 billion a year for each of the next four years to address shortfalls by the 2029-30 school year.

"We cannot accept a

a host of PA dairy industry leaders joined Redding to unveil the sculpture, which depicts urban and rural Pennsylvan­ians connecting around a meal of delicious local food against a backdrop of a cityscape and farm skyline. The diners are celebratin­g a harvest of PA products with a centerpiec­e of the keystone-and-checkmark PA Preferred logo.

plan that is politicall­y convenient but fails our students," said Deborah Gordon Klehr, executive director of the

Education Law Center, one of the nonprofit legal organizati­ons that represente­d the schools.

The proposal advanced Thursday follows the court ruling last year that the state's $35 billion school-funding system is unconstitu­tional and shortchang­es students in poor zip codes.

It comes as the deadline approaches for the final report of a commission tasked with recommendi­ng how to update the formula that distribute­s state aid to Pennsylvan­ia's 500 school districts.

The commission is composed of lawmakers and members of Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro's administra­tion. Its commission report will conclude two months of work and 11 hearings.

Shapiro has acknowledg­ed the court's ruling looms large over his forthcomin­g budget proposal, due in February. He has supported calls for equity in school funding, but in recent weeks he suggested that footing the bill for the money is an important considerat­ion.

"It's a big number," said Dan Urevickack­elsberg, senior attorney for the Public Interest Law Center, which also represente­d

the schools. "We don't pretend that's not a big number, but it's also an urgent problem."

Lawyers for the school districts that sued have said they will return to court to ask a judge to compel Shapiro and lawmakers to better close the funding gap among districts across the state if a distributi­on plan isn't put into place with a reasonable timeframe.

The lawyers analyzed the spending of districts that perform well based on Pennsylvan­ia's goals and compared that to what the state estimates those districts' needs are, determinin­g how much every school district should have

in order to mirror that same success. On average, school districts are short $2,500 per student, they said.

Their proposal calls on the state to develop a system that finds how much funding is needed to reach the state's adequacy goals, determine how much funding is missing from each district, and allocate the funds in a consistent, predictabl­e manner beginning in the 2024-25 year. The state should not rely on local tax dollars to fill the gap, they said. It should also consider facilities and pre-k funding.

"The court decision in early 2023 changed the game," said Susan Spicka, executive director of Education

Voters of Pennsylvan­ia. "Lawmakers and the governor can no longer base school funding levels on how much they feel like investing each year as they have in the past. There is a new standard that they must meet, which is ensuring universal access to a comprehens­ive, effective and contempora­ry education."

Public school advocates are likelier to find more support for their plan from the Democratic-controlled House than the Republican-controlled Senate. The majority of state senators are resistant to spending billions of new dollars on public schools and instead have pushed to send more state

money to subsidize private schools.

Additional­ly, while Shapiro made significan­t investment­s in public education in his first budget cycle, it did not go as far as public education advocates and other Democrats were hoping.

"Our governor has touted the extraordin­ary work of the Commonweal­th and the city of Philadelph­ia to repair I-95 in less than two weeks, and we urge that that same resolve and ambition be adopted by the governor and all parties in stopping the school funding lawsuit," said Donna Cooper, executive director of Children First.

 ?? Commonweal­th Media Services ?? Agricultur­e Secretary Russell Redding unveiled the 2024 PA Farm Show Butter Sculpture, a 1,000-pound diorama in dairy titled, A Table for All: Pennsylvan­ia Dairy Connects Communitie­s.
Commonweal­th Media Services Agricultur­e Secretary Russell Redding unveiled the 2024 PA Farm Show Butter Sculpture, a 1,000-pound diorama in dairy titled, A Table for All: Pennsylvan­ia Dairy Connects Communitie­s.

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