Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gubernator­ial hopeful offers plan for schools

Attorney general vows board shakeups, choice

- By Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal

Gubernator­ial candidate Adam Laxalt unveiled his education plan Wednesday calling for extensive reforms in Nevada’s K-12 system that he says leaves too many students “stuck in schools that are failing them.”

Laxalt’s plan, dubbed Nevada’s Next Chapter in Education Reform, would alter how the trustees of the school boards for Clark and Washoe counties are chosen, loosen restrictio­ns on charter schools and instill more state-level oversight of local school districts’ spending.

Laxalt, a Republican, said his education platform has come together after months of meetings with Nevada teachers, administra­tors and policymake­rs.

“Education is the civil rights issue of our time. Too many kids are never given a chance to succeed because they are stuck in schools that are failing them,” he said in a news release detailing the platform.

Laxalt’s plan promises that Nevada “will never go backwards from our current levels of education spending,” but several of his proposals would require either additional money or cuts from other areas in the education budget.

Those include doubling out-ofpocket spending reimbursem­ent for the states’ 20,000-plus teachers from $250 per year to $500, rewarding

“high performing” schools with monetary awards, doubling the cap on Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p programs to $64 million per biennium and calling for increased funding career and technical education programs offered to students.

Other highlights of Laxalt’s platform include the following:

Mandating promised raises: Laxalt said he would support legislatio­n that mandates school districts set aside money for teacher pay raises that are detailed in the district’s contracts.

More school choice: Laxalt’s platform calls for the state to speedup the approval process for new charter schools and the expansion of the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p system and expresses his support for education savings accounts, which provide families with money in per-pupil funding for private school tuition, home-school expenses and other educationa­l services.

 ?? Benjamin Hager ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Attorney General Adam Laxalt, who is running for governor, answers a question Wednesday during a round table discussion on education reform at Laxalt’s campaign office in Las Vegas.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal Attorney General Adam Laxalt, who is running for governor, answers a question Wednesday during a round table discussion on education reform at Laxalt’s campaign office in Las Vegas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States