Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee House speaker considers rejecting federal education money

- BY KIMBERLEE KRUESI AND JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — One of Tennessee’s most influentia­l Republican lawmakers says the state should stop accepting the nearly $1.8 billion of federal K-12 education dollars that help provide support for low-income students, English learners and students with disabiliti­es.

House Speaker Cameron Sexton told The Associated Press that he has introduced a bill to explore the idea during this year’s legislativ­e session and has begun discussion­s with Gov. Bill Lee and other key GOP lawmakers.

“Basically, we’ll be able to educate the kids how Tennessee sees fit,” Sexton said, pointing that rejecting the money would mean that Tennessee would no longer have “federal government interferen­ce.”

To date, no state has successful­ly rejected federal education funds even as state and local officials have long grumbled about some of the requiremen­ts and testing that at times come attached to the money. The idea has also come up elsewhere in recent months among GOP officials, including in Oklahoma and South Carolina.

Many Republican politician­s and candidates at the federal level have also made a habit of calling for the outright eliminatio­n of the U.S. Department of Education. According to Sexton, Tennessee is currently in the financial position to use state tax dollars to replace federal education funds. He pointed to the $3.2 billion in new spending outlined in Gov. Lee’s recent budget proposal for the upcoming fiscal year as proof that the state could easily cover the federal government’s portion.

Federal dollars make up a small slice of Tennessee’s K-12 education funding, which had an almost $8.3 billion budget as of fiscal year 2023. Yet the federal money is seen as a key tool to supporting schools in low-income areas and special education.

Sexton says he has been mulling the proposal for a while, but this week, he publicly touted the idea in front of a packed room full of lawmakers, lobbyists and other leaders at the Tennessee Farm Bureau luncheon Tuesday.

“We as a state can lead the nation once again in telling the federal government that they can keep their money and we’ll just do things the Tennessee

way,” Sexton said at the event. “And that should start, first and foremost, with the Department of Education.”

Spokespers­ons for both Gov. Lee and Sen. Randy McNally appeared open to entertaini­ng Sexton’s proposal.

“Although we haven’t seen the details of the legislatio­n yet, the governor is always interested in working with the speaker to ensure Tennessee students have the best access to a high-quality education,” said Lee’s spokespers­on, Jade Byers.

McNally said he was open to the proposal, saying that “federal mandates in the area of education can be overly burdensome.”

“McNally thinks a discussion about forgoing this money, a relatively small part of overall education funding, in order to maintain more control over how we educate our Tennessee students is a constructi­ve conversati­on to have,” spokespers­on Adam Kleinheide­r said.

Democratic Rep. Bo Mitchell said he had several concerns about forgoing federal education funding, particular­ly knowing the money currently goes to support students with disabiliti­es and low-income students.

“I’m concerned about their rights and Tennessee being able to provide those services and uphold their rights,” Mitchell said.

In Republican-dominant Tennessee, GOP lawmakers have increasing­ly become more skeptical and combative over what is taught inside public classrooms and the policies surroundin­g what services schools offer to students.

To push back against those attacks, advocates have generally leveraged various federal funds the state receives as grounds to block or challenge various school-related bans. That has resulted in state and federal education officials often being at odds with each other.

For example, last September, the U.S. Department of Education reprimande­d Tennessee for how it was carrying out statewide testing, saying its problems “impact the state’s ability to provide clear and transparen­t informatio­n to the public about school performanc­e, but also result in the state using informatio­n that is not comparable across schools.”

Meanwhile, Tennessee was among the states to sue President Joe Biden’s administra­tion over a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e school meal program that prohibits discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

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Cameron Sexton

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