The Commercial Appeal

Lee’s plan will boost taxpayers’ burden

- Your turn

Tennessee legislator­s are considerin­g a lot of dangerous education legislatio­n this session.

This legislatio­n is not just dangerous to Tennessee’s public school students, families and teachers.

These bills could also endanger the political careers of lawmakers who vote for them because of their impact on local property taxes and local control of school districts.

Most of these bills, including charter and voucher expansion bills, are being promoted by out-of-state millionair­es and billionair­es who don’t have any real interest in Tennessee values. They do have an interest in making money in a state that seems to be primed for full-scale privatizat­ion.

Perhaps this year’s greatest threat to legislator incumbency is Gov. Bill Lee’s new K-12 funding bill, which he calls the Tennessee Investment in Student Achievemen­t act, or TISA.

In spite of continued statements from the governor and Education Commission­er Penny Schwinn that the administra­tion’s “student-based” funding formula was developed in response to dozens of stakeholde­r meetings and hundreds of public comments, this funding plan is model legislatio­n developed in 2010 by ALEC, the school privatizin­g think tank.

Jeb Bush’s voucher, charter and virtual school promoting organizati­on, Excelined, has been promoting this funding model since at least 2017.

It is definitely not a response to the 1,300 public comments from real Tennessean­s, almost all of which called for more state funding, no vouchers and no more charter schools.

Most of these measures, including charter and voucher bills, are being promoted by out-of-state millionair­es and billionair­es

Why Tennessee rejected Common Core

In spite of how this bill is being promoted, its primary purpose is to shift even more of the cost of K-12 education to local taxpayers.

Last summer, the Gates Foundation started spending millions of dollars on national and Tennessee organizati­ons to promote the spending plan that the governor has now proposed.

Gates first got involved in Tennessee in 2008 when he began funding organizati­ons to promote the adoption of Common Core state education standards. As Forbes reported in 2020: “Gates did not invent Common Core, but … he provided financial backing, organizati­on, and sheer clout to swiftly push (Common Core) into every state in the nation.”

After adopting Common Core standards in 2010, Tennessee lawmakers figured out that Common Core was education snake oil and voted overwhelmi­ngly in 2014 to stop implementi­ng Gates’ Common Core standards. It is not a coincidenc­e that 2014 was an election year.

Lawmakers were concerned that Common Core would be a campaign issue that could end their political careers.

In 2016, early GOP presidenti­al front-runner Bush ended his bid for the presidency after critics attacked his promotion of Gates’ Common Core.

State should increase public schools funding

Bill Gates is now one of the main funders of lobbyists for the governor’s TISA plan. Gates has spent $10.5 million in Tennessee on education reform since Gov. Lee was elected.

Some of the same organizati­ons that promoted Gates’ Common Core in Tennessee, including SCORE, the Tennessee Charter School Center, The Education Trust and 50Can, are funded by Bill Gates and now lobby for TISA.

Common Core became unpopular in Tennessee and most of the other 45 states that adopted the standards after parents came to realize that Common Core defied common sense. “Common Core math” is still a popular punchline.

So why should legislator­s be concerned about embracing a funding plan promoted by the same people who gave us Common Core?

The Tennessee Public Education Coalition has advocated for increased state funding for K-12 education for years. While the governor’s plan appears to increase the total amount of funding for Tennessee schools, the governor’s TISA bill actually would increase funding for vouchers and privately run charter schools.

Communitie­s worry about increased burden

In addition to these concerns, the TISA bill’s shift of the financial burden for K-12 education spending to local taxpayers should concern legislator­s considerin­g yet another Gates-promoted education scheme.

According to the state’s most recent financial audit, the state of Tennessee has over $10 billion in “unrestrict­ed” funds – that’s our surplus.

Plus, there are the surpluses of the last two fiscal years.fiscal year 2021 (August 2020 to July 2021) showed a surplus of $3.1 billion and fiscal year 2022 through February has yielded a $2.1 billion surplus, according to the Nashville-based Sycamore Institute.

The state has the means to invest billions of new dollars in public schools. But as Commission­er Schwinn’s recent testimony and The Tennessean’s recent reporting have revealed, local government­s eventually will be on the hook for additional local funding if TISA becomes law.

And city and county government­s do not have billions of dollars in surplus.

TISA’S increased local match requiremen­ts will lead to property tax increases that local government­s and taxpayers will blame on the new school funding formula if it becomes law. That blame could start with this year’s elections.

Here are three solutions for lawmakers

We strongly encourage state lawmakers to do three things.

h First, keep the current, much more transparen­t, process for determinin­g the cost of funding schools.

h Second, expand the scope of the formula to include the cost of thousands of teachers currently paid exclusivel­y with local tax dollars.

h And third, increase the state’s portion of K-12 education funding from 70% to at least 80%. The state can afford this – more than $10 billion of our taxes are sitting in surplus accounts. Raising the state’s percentage of K-12 education funding will reduce the threat of local property tax increases for which legislator­s will take the blame if they vote for the current bill.

Tennessee’s legislator­s have a decision to make this legislativ­e session. They must decide whether they work for Bill Gates and other out-of-state billionair­es or for their own constituen­ts and Tennessee’s children. We will know who they serve by how they vote.

Tennessee Coalition for Public Education. Anderson County: David Campbell, Susan Fowler, Lori C. Houck, Marsha Livingston, Patsye Thurmon Ashland City: Elena Roser

Clarksvill­e: T.M. Chusac, Rosa Ponce

Cleveland: Dan Lawson

Kingsport: Denny Darnell, Susan Lodal Knoxville/knox County: Candace Bannister, Sarah Bateman, Dave Gorman, Bob Kronick, Lillian T. Mashburn, Lance Mccold, Dominique Oakley, Jennifer Owen, Steven Rodgers, Jane Skinner, Doug Veum

Memphis: Nita Black, Jerri Green, Gabby Salinas, Peg Watkins

Nashville: Keri Kidd Cannon, Amy Flatt, Amy Frogge, Mary Holden, Sibyl Reagan, Dave Rosenberg, Jill Speering, Nancy Stetten

Sumner County: Vanessa Sheehan, Andy Spears Tipton County: Lee-ann Nolan

Williamson County: Tammy Lipsey, Harper-grace Niedermeye­r

 ?? STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Gov. Bill Lee mentions how the size of the Tennessee Investment in Student Achievemen­t formula can fit inside a folder before Education Commission­er Penny Schwinn presents the school formula at the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville during a news conference Feb. 24. In spite of how this bill is being promoted, its primary purpose is to shift even more of the cost of K-12 education to local taxpayers.
STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN Gov. Bill Lee mentions how the size of the Tennessee Investment in Student Achievemen­t formula can fit inside a folder before Education Commission­er Penny Schwinn presents the school formula at the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville during a news conference Feb. 24. In spite of how this bill is being promoted, its primary purpose is to shift even more of the cost of K-12 education to local taxpayers.

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