Observer News Enterprise

At his old school, term-limited NC governor takes new tack on public education funding

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NASHVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Blocked by Republican legislator­s at most every turn to advance his education agenda, Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper said on Tuesday he’d seek in his final year on the job to build a coalition to prod the General Assembly to improve public schools toward his policy preference­s.

Visiting his boyhood elementary school before formally proclaimin­g 2024 as “The Year of Public Schools,” Cooper said he would attempt to bring outside pressure upon General Assembly leaders to boost K-12 spending, salaries and other programs.

“We’re going to talk about the great work that our public schools are doing and how they can get even better,” Cooper said at Nashville Elementary School, which he attended through seventh grade and lived blocks away. Nashville is about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Raleigh, the state capital.

While highlighti­ng statewide high graduation rates, a strong pre-kindergart­en program and teacher accomplish­ments, the governor said North Carolina’s continued economic vibrancy is threatened by low per-pupil spending and beginning teacher pay. And a dramatic expansion of the state’s privatesch­ool voucher program will cost $4 billion in cumulative taxpayer dollars over the next decade, he said.

More than eight out of 10 school-age children attend public schools, Cooper’s office said.

“Our success in economic developmen­t today is a direct result of the reverence of public education over the decades,” Cooper said in the school’s library, but “our strong public schools are at risk, and if we don’t act, our children and grandchild­ren, our businesses and our community will bear the consequenc­es.”

Cooper likened his effort in part to his campaign since taking office in 2017 to get the GOP-controlled legislatur­e to expand Medicaid coverage to hundreds of thousands of low-income adults. That included building an alliance of health leaders, county sheriffs, commission­ers and business owners from both major parties.

Expansion just took effect just last month.

Cooper is term-limited from seeking reelection, and the General Assembly likely will adjourn for the year by early summer. And since Republican­s hold narrow veto-proof majorities, they are under no obligation to work with Cooper on legislatio­n.

He acknowledg­ed the education effort likely will continue after he leaves office.

“There’s no question this is a long-term battle because it’s going to be a long-term fix,” Cooper told reporters. “We need to highlight the positives of public schools, which are numerous, and on top of that understand that they’re operating on a shoestring budget and that they won’t stay good if we don’t provide the proper funding.”

The governor’s reframed pitch comes a year after taking another tack that Republican­s responded to with ridicule and resulted in few successes within the final twoyear state budget. Last May, Cooper declared an unofficial “state of emergency” for public education and urged the public to tell their legislator­s to reject GOP-backed education policy, spending and tax measures.

But in the end, the budget enacted in October will greatly expand what’s known as the state’s K-12 Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p program to attend private schools so that families of any income level could receive financial help.

“I am not against private schools. But I am against taxpayer money going to private schools at the expense of public schools,” he said on Tuesday.

Republican Rep. Allen Chesser of Nash County said he attended the event in his legislativ­e capacity and out of respect for Cooper’s office. Disappoint­ed with the governor’s critique, Chesser defended the GOP’s record on education and rejectied Cooper’s argument that the scholarshi­ps siphoned money away from public schools.

Republican­s argue it’s appropriat­e for the state to provide financial help to families to ensure their children can succeed in private or religious schools.

While Cooper and Republican­s “disagree on some nuanced funding mechanisms ... we totally agree on the importance of public education,” Chesser said. “I think (the GOP) budget has done that. We can always do better and we will endeavor to do better.”

The governor will propose budget adjustment­s as the legislatur­e begins its work session in late April. A Cooper administra­tion document asks the public to tell legislator­s to halt funding for the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p program until public schools are “fully funded” and to “pay teachers like the profession­als they are.”

The teacher raises in the two-year budget were far below what Cooper wanted — average K-12 teacher salaries would grow by at least 7% over two years, compared to the 18% that Cooper had proposed.

The North Carolina Supreme Court ruled in 2022 that hundreds of millions of dollars could be transferre­d without the General Assembly’s express approval from government coffers to carry out a plan to address longstandi­ng education inequities. But a new edition of the Supreme Court — now with a majority of Republican justices — will consider the matter again next month.

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