Chattanooga Times Free Press

› Panel says Tennessee needs more school nurses, counselors,

- BY MARTA W. ALDRICH CHALKBEAT TENNESSEE

With the pandemic highlighti­ng the importance of students’ physical, social and emotional health, an influentia­l Tennessee committee is urging Gov. Bill Lee to prioritize more funding for school nurses and counselors next year.

An annual investment of about $110 million would get Tennessee to nationally recommende­d ratios of nurses and counselors in public schools, according to the panel of government and education officials that annually reviews the state’s education funding formula.

The improvemen­ts, outlined Monday in a letter to Lee, would allow Tennessee to fund one nurse for every 750 students instead of the current ratio of 1 to 3,000.

Tennessee also could fund one counselor for every 250 students. Currently, the state covers the cost of one counselor for every 500 students in elementary schools and one per 350 students in grades seven through 12.

The recommenda­tions mark the first time Tennessee’s BEP Review Committee has elevated both needs to the top of its priority list for how to improve public education through the funding formula known as the Basic Education Program.

The top billing acknowledg­es what education experts have been saying for a long time: Healthier students are better learners.

The committee’s endorsemen­t boosts the likelihood that Lee and the legislatur­e will seriously consider investing in needs state officials have long discussed but deemed too costly.

Last year, the governor and

“If we don’t start teaching those core competenci­es to children, it’s much harder to teach them as adults.”

— LAUREN BAKER, MEMBER OF TENNESSEE SCHOOL COUNSELORS ASSOCIATIO­N BOARD OF DIRECTORS

lawmakers followed the panel’s recommenda­tion to maintain funding for public schools in this year’s budget, even as student enrollment declined due to the pandemic. And former Gov. Bill Haslam heeded the panel’s suggestion­s when building several of his spending plans, resulting in hundreds of millions of additional dollars allocated toward teacher compensati­on.

In its letter, the 22-member BEP committee said nurses are critical “to meet the needs of all students, and in light of the ongoing public health crisis.”

The panel also cited the “expanded role and scope of responsibi­lities of school counselors,” who create comprehens­ive programs focused on student outcomes and help students navigate paths toward college and career opportunit­ies.

The letter was signed by Lillian Hartgrove, a member of the BEP panel and chairwoman of the Tennessee State Board of Education.

Lee was traveling Tuesday in East Tennessee, and his press secretary, Casey Black, said the governor was reviewing the committee’s recommenda­tions.

Earlier this year, as the pandemic continued to take a toll on student wellbeing, Lee championed a budget that included a $250 million trust fund to address student mental health through annual investment income — but did not include extra money to quickly hire more school nurses, counselors, social workers and psychologi­sts.

A leader with the Tennessee School Counselors Associatio­n lauded the prospect of more funding for the 2022-23 fiscal year, which begins next July.

“We have definitely never been at the top of this list before,” said Lauren Baker, who serves on the associatio­n’s board of directors.

Baker said the ratio of counselors to students is especially dire in elementary and middle schools, since much of Tennessee’s counseling focus is on college and career readiness. But the early grades are just as important, she said.

“A lot of industry people have talked to our Tennessee leaders about college graduates struggling to regulate their emotions or having difficulty with communicat­ion or problem-solving skills. If we don’t start teaching those core competenci­es to children, it’s much harder to teach them as adults,” Baker said Tuesday.

Most districts already hire more nurses and counselors than are funded through the BEP formula. Providing more state funding for those areas would free up local funds for other needs, including teacher compensati­on, technology, or hiring more specialist­s for the state’s 7-year-old instructio­nal interventi­on program. All three of those items rounded out the committee’s Top 5 list of recommende­d funding priorities.

Tennessee schools have received $4 billion-plus in federal relief funding — a historic amount — to pay for COVID-19-related expenses that range from learning recovery and accelerati­on programs to improved ventilatio­n systems for school buildings. But that money must be spent or obligated by September 2024, when it will no longer be available to fill recurring expenses such as salaries.

Still, many districts are using the federal funds to hire more nurses and counselors temporaril­y — an approach that kicks the can down the road, said Robert Eby, vice chairman of the state Board of Education.

“I think we need to realize that the [federal] funds are one time only,” Eby said at a recent BEP Review

Committee meeting. “They weren’t originally in there for recurring costs.”

At the same meeting, Hartgrove addressed naysayers who say the federal infusion of cash should be enough for now.

“In reality, these are temporary pots of money to assist with the current crisis. But you have a longterm need, regardless of the pandemic,” she said.

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