New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Give children the resources they need for a great education

- By Subira Gordon, Ruben Felipe, Daniel Pearson, Jamilah Prince-Stewart and Lisa Hammersley

So often, when we discuss education funding, we stick to the dollar and cents. The total amount a school receives. The per-pupil spending. But it’s what those dollars do, the doors they open, and the experience­s they provide that matter most.

What does an additional $1,330 mean for a fourth-grader in Waterbury? How about an additional $1,450 for an eighthgrad­er in New Britain? Or the additional $1,840 for a kindergart­ner in New London?

It could mean social work support, smaller class sizes, a laptop, a new work-based learning program or access to extracurri­culars. It could be the difference between a child finding their passion or feeling left behind. It could be the difference between a thriving Connecticu­t economy, and one that struggles to remain competitiv­e in the long term.

So how does Connecticu­t make this happen? The studentcen­tered funding formula outlined in HB5283 would provide the funding necessary to make these critical difference­s in the lives of Connecticu­t’s public school students, regardless of what type of school they attend.

If a school has mental health concerns, they’ll have the resources needed to hire school psychologi­sts. If another school has concerns regarding their math outcomes, they can hire interventi­onists and tutors. And, if families need better after-school or summer learning options, schools can build out additional programmin­g.

HB5283 recalibrat­es and simplifies Connecticu­t’s Education Cost Sharing formula to send much-needed resources to students starting in fiscal year 2025 — when federal COVID relief funds expire. The proposal:

funds students based on their individual needs;

shrinks the state’s alarming racial and socio-economic education funding gaps by more than 53 percent;

provides equitable funding to all students in traditiona­l, magnet, charter, and vocational­agricultur­al schools; and

eliminates the need for interdistr­ict tuition payments.

The funding fix also complement­s proposals before the legislatur­e to provide greater mental health supports (SB1), diversify the educator workforce (SB274), and invest in early childhood education.

Connecticu­t continues to see its fiscal health improve with a large rainy day fund and considerab­le budget surpluses. But what “rainy day” are we waiting for when it is pouring for Black, brown, and low-income students across the state? Investment­s in education are life changing and can help students break generation­al poverty.

We must ask ourselves and our lawmakers, if we do not invest in our children when we have the resources to do so, when will we?

To learn more about HB5283 and its impact on your town, please visit: Student-Centered Funding, and Funding by District in HB5283.

Subira Gordon, of Connecticu­t Coalition for Achievemen­t Now (ConnCAN); Ruben Felipe, of the Connecticu­t Charter Schools Associatio­n; Daniel Pearson, of Educators for Excellence; Jamilah Prince-Stewart, of FaithActs for Education; and Lisa Hammersley, of School and State Finance Project are are the executive directors for member organizati­ons of the Education Justice Now Coalition, a group of education policy organizati­ons.

 ?? Cassandra Day / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A school bus on the way to Middletown High School.
Cassandra Day / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A school bus on the way to Middletown High School.

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