Sentinel & Enterprise

Baker budget to fund 2019 school reform law

- Dy Eolin A. 1oun2

The fiscal year 2022 state budget that Gov. Charlie Baker will file next week will fully fund, for the first time, a major school finance reform law passed in late 2019 to steer $1.5 billion to K-12 schools over seven years, he said Friday.

During his annual address to the Massachuse­tts Municipal Associatio­n on Friday, Baker did not say how much money full funding for the Student Opportunit­y Act represents, but estimates for the annual cost of the law have ranged from about $300 million to $430 million.

“We’re pleased to continue making these important investment­s in our schools and our communitie­s,” Baker said. “Over the past six years we’ve worked closely with the Legislatur­e to triple the size of our rainy day fund by carefully managing the state’s finances, and that’s enabled us to make these important investment­s to and with the people of Massachuse­tts without raising taxes in the midst of a pandemic.”

Last year, before the pandemic hit, Baker proposed a budget that would have increased Chapter 70 aid for local schools by $303.5 million. The Massachuse­tts Budget and Policy Center, however, argued that Baker was increasing low-income student support at a slower rate than other categories of aid and Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, who filed one of the bills on which the Student Opportunit­y Act was based, said Baker’s pre-pandemic proposal did not fully fund “both the letter and spirit of the Student Opportunit­y Act.”

The Student Opportunit­y Act was supposed to be implemente­d starting this fiscal year, but weeks of business shutdowns, skyrocketi­ng unemployme­nt and widespread uncertaint­y this spring had budget managers expecting a big drop in revenue collection­s. The Baker administra­tion in late July announced that local and school aid would be held at last years level’s for fiscal 2021, plus federal dollars made available to help schools reopen and an additional $107 million in school aid to cover inflation and enrollment factors. The Student Opportunit­y Act did not create a revenue source for the new funding and left it up to the Legislatur­e to find and include the money in each year’s budget.

Baker is expected to file the budget bill on Wednesday and could offer additional insights into what he will propose when he gives his annual State of the Commonweal­th address Tuesday night.

On Thursday, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito told the MMA that the budget Baker files next week will recommend increasing the state’s general local aid account by $39.5 million to $1.168 billion, which works out to an increase of $112,535, on average, for all 351 municipali­ties.

The announceme­nt was in keeping with the Baker administra­tion’s past practice to align growth of city and town non-school aid with estimated increases in tax revenue for the coming year. Last week, the administra­tion and Legislatur­e agreed to build fiscal 2022 spending plans on the assumption that state tax revenues will grow by 3.5% to an estimated $30.12 billion. Baker said Friday that his administra­tion has already released $1.36 billion in Chapter 90 funding since taking office and committed to filing a proposal next week for another $200 million in local road and bridge money.

 ?? ScReeNSHOT ?? gov. charlie Baker gave his annual address to the Massachuse­tts Municipal associatio­n virtually on friday.
ScReeNSHOT gov. charlie Baker gave his annual address to the Massachuse­tts Municipal associatio­n virtually on friday.

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