The Morning Call

Poorest schools won’t receive extra funding

- By Marley Parish Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star

BELLEFONTE — Pennsylvan­ia’s poorest districts won’t receive $100 million in new money to help fill vacancies and reduce funding deficits after lawmakers diverted those dollars to school constructi­on projects.

Roughly half of the 100 “Level Up” schools serve students in rural counties where population­s are shrinking, and taxpayers bear the brunt of rising costs.

After initially agreeing to send hundreds of millions in additional funding to the state’s 100 poorest school districts, state lawmakers decided to reroute that money to fund school constructi­on projects as a compromise when Democrats and Republican­s were finalizing the remaining parts of the budget in December.

The decision came after a monthslong budget impasse, partially stemming from the parties’ disagreeme­nt over private school vouchers, and about a year after a state Commonweal­th Court judge declared Pennsylvan­ia’s current public school funding system unconstitu­tional. Lawmakers and the governor at that time were ordered to develop a new way to pay for education across the state’s 500 public school districts.

These Level Up districts will still receive their share of $225 million earmarked for those in need, but education advocates and participan­ts in a school funding lawsuit were hoping for new dollars to support poor schools.

The Pennsylvan­ia Associatio­n of Rural and Small Schools, which has 237 member districts and signed on to the landmark court case, hoped the budget would make a significan­t down payment toward education funding. The state increased spending on K-12 education by more than $700 million in the most recent budget, to a total annual investment of over $10 billion. The budget included more dollars for basic education, special education and a program to remove toxins from school buildings.

Earlier this month, lawyers who represente­d the plaintiffs in the school funding case said they would pursue further legal action if the Legislatur­e and Gov. Josh Shapiro failed to rectify school funding shortfalls, calling for a $2 billion investment in public education in 2024-25 and an additional $1 billion in new funding every year for the next four fiscal years.

Joe Clapper, assistant executive director of PARSS, praised increased education spending but said redirectin­g the $100 million is a step back because school districts were banking on that aid to hire more staff, such as special education teachers and counselors, and address other gaps in resources.

“It’s unfortunat­e that the most underfunde­d districts in the commonweal­th, including these Level Up districts, have a disproport­ionate share of students of color, students living in poverty, and students with disabiliti­es,” Clapper told

Spotlight PA. “Losing that funding is a grave disservice.”

Altoona Area School District received $721,000 in Level Up funding in 2021 and more than $1.7 million last year. More than half of those enrolled in the district come from low-income families, according to state data.

Those dollars helped supplement the district’s spending, Val Mignogna, Altoona’s school board president, told Spotlight PA. He added that the boost alleviated some of the tax burden on residents.

Even after last year’s legal victory, the petitioner­s in the school funding case knew it would take time for legislator­s to create a new K-12 spending formula. In the meantime, programs like Level Up help keep underfunde­d districts afloat, Susan Spicka, executive director of Education Voters of Pennsylvan­ia, told Spotlight PA.

“Level Up was a tiny, stop-gap solution, and it was a really important one,” Spicka said.

The Commonweal­th Financing Authority, which operates in the state Department of Community and Economic Developmen­t, and the state Department of Education will guide decisions about applying for and distributi­ng the $100 million for constructi­on projects. A spokespers­on for the governor’s office said more informatio­n will be available in the coming weeks.

This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom dedicated to investigat­ive and public-service journalism for Pennsylvan­ia. Sign up for our regional newsletter, Talk of the Town.

SUPPORT THIS JOURNALISM and help us reinvigora­te local news in north-central Pennsylvan­ia at spotlightp­a.org/donate/ statecolle­ge. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity and public-service journalism that gets results.

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