The Denver Post

Lawmakers fighting over “rounding error” in funding

- By Erica Meltzer

Fewer students showed up in Colorado this year than predicted, and they were a little better off economical­ly too. That slight discrepanc­y between the forecast and the actual student count has created some wiggle room in the state’s $6.6 billion education budget. That wiggle room, in turn, has led to a partisan fight over the fate of a few million dollars, less than one-tenth of 1 percent of what the state spends on K-12 education.

Democrats want to hold total education spending steady and send an additional $12.9 million to school districts, an average of $8 more per student. Republican­s want to keep average per-pupil spending steady at $7,662 and put $7 million in savings into the general fund.

That’s the substance of the dispute, but it’s also a symbolic fight that could herald a bigger budget battle to come.

“Going into the session, the precursor was how much we would fight over transporta­tion versus education,” said state Rep. Millie Hamner, a Dillon Democrat and chair of the Joint Budget Committee. “And that’s what this would appear to be about.”

Colorado has more money available for the state budget this year, thanks in part to a historic compromise at the end of the last session that freed up room under the revenue cap imposed by the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights. Republican­s want to use that new fiscal freedom to dedicate $300 million a year toward a transporta­tion bond program. The governor’s office has proposed an amount less than half that.

Democrats, meanwhile, want to use that extra money for a range of needs, including putting more money toward K-12 education. Since the Great Recession, the state has not funded schools at the levels dictated by the state constituti­on. But every dollar that goes toward paying down the negative factor is a dollar that isn’t available for roads.

“This year you would think it would be easier because we have more money, but that is not what is happening,” Hamner said. “There is so much pent-up need.”

A bill that makes midyear adjustment­s to school funding is now going into its fifth round of debate because the two sides can’t agree. The Republican position prevailed on the Joint Budget Committee back in January, but when the bill got to the floor of the state House, Democrats amended it to add money back in. But in the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, most of that money got stripped back out, returning the bill to the form it had when it left the Joint Budget Committee. Then the Republican-controlled state Senate spent nearly two hours over two days in fierce debate over the bill as Democrats argued in vain to keep the $7 million in schools.

Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organizati­on covering education issues. For more, visit chalkbeat.org/co

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