Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sandoval declares state ‘at the bottom no more’

Governor says ‘every child in the state will be touched’ by series of initiative­s

- By SEAN WHALEY and KNOWLES ADKISSON

CARSON CITY — Gov. Brian Sandoval’s many-pronged education spending and reform package approved by the just-concluded 2015 Legislatur­e represents the most significan­t change to the public school system in 60 years.

Sandoval signed three of the measures into law Wednesday at three Las Vegas elementary schools: a Read by Three measure, funding for English Language Learners in the Zoom Schools program and a new Victory Schools program to improve student performanc­e at schools in high-poverty areas.

The three measures will provide more than $100 million to schools for programs such as literacy, pre-kindergart­en, English as a Second Language and profession­al developmen­t for teachers.

“We’re going to provide these children every opportunit­y,” Sandoval told an assembled crowd at Kelly Elemen- tary School on J Street, south of Lake Mead Boulevard. “Nevada will be at the bottom no more.”

But the “education session” also produced more controvers­ial measures, with school choice becoming law in Ne-

vada, along with a measure seeking to break up the Clark County School District that Senate Democrats complained was rammed through at the last minute.

In an interview Tuesday the day after the session ended, Sandoval said getting even one or two of his initiative­s would have been a monumental achievemen­t in a single session. So many initiative­s winning approval is a huge success, he said.

“This is the education session,” Sandoval said. “Every child in the state will be touched.”

The list of new and expanding programs includes:

■ $27 million for a new Read by Three program that will require third-graders to be reading proficient or be held back.

■ Nearly $142 million to expand allday kindergart­en into every school in the state.

■ First-ever state funding totaling $10 million for gifted and talented students.

■ A statewide Achievemen­t School District that could take over half a dozen of Nevada’s 78 failing schools and operate them as charters.

■ $50 million in additional funding, for a total of $100 million, to help English Language Learners through the Zoom Schools program.

Bills will strengthen Nevada’s charter schools, provide $15 million for a new teacher scholarshi­p program and pay incentives to Nevada educators in hard- to-fill jobs, and create a new office with funding for social workers to combat bullying.

Sandoval said the inspiratio­n for the scholarshi­p bill was his daughter Maddy, who is considerin­g a career as a teacher.

Sandoval praised Dale Erquiaga, his superinten­dent of public education, for developing and lobbying for the comprehens­ive education reform plan.

Erquiaga said the Legislatur­e has accomplish­ed something that has not been done since 1955, when the sales tax was created and lawmakers restructur­ed the school system.

“They increased education spending and really started a brand new system for reform,” he said. “It really is a new Nevada. I can’t think of another time when there was so much reform and such an investment.”

The many programs have accountabi­lity measures to ensure the dollars are spent wisely and the successes can be measured, Erquiaga said.

Sen. Mo Denis, D-Las Vegas, became emotional when talking about Sandoval’s new revenue plan and the effect it will have on education in Nevada. Twenty-five years ago he volunteere­d with the PTA to help his daughter and her classmates.

“That goal to make things better for my kids, and of course I’ve had four other kids since then, it seems like it’s taken a long time to get to this point,” he said. “But this is a wonderful day. This is a day that makes all of the sacrifices ... worth it.”

But Assemblyma­n Ira Hansen, R-Sparks, argued against much of the education plan, saying that past requests for funding came with promises of accountabi­lity that never materializ­ed.

Joyce Haldeman, a lobbyist for the Clark County School District, said there are many good programs in the budget.

“We’re excited to be able to expand allday kindergart­en to every child in Nevada,” she said. “We’re also excited about the expansion of Zoom Schools.”

But the deconsolid­ation of the district is a concern, Haldeman said. The district would have preferred the proposal to come back to the 2017 Legislatur­e. Instead, it will go to a smaller number of lawmakers who meet as the Legislativ­e Commission.

“If the decision is made that we better serve kids with smaller districts, we’re not opposed to that,” Haldeman said. “What we are opposed to is rushing into it.”

The effect on the ability of the district to bond for new constructi­on is also a concern, she said.

Without question the most controvers­ial measures of the session have created school choice for the first time in Nevada. One will allow parents to obtain scholarshi­ps for their children to attend private schools, including religious schools, giving businesses that donate to scholarshi­ps a credit on their payroll taxes.

An even more controvers­ial measure, signed into law by Sandoval on Tuesday, will provide grants for a child’s education that are 90 percent of the state’s average per-student funding. That money would go into an education savings account for the child. Under the measure, the state would oversee the spending by issuing the parents coded debit cards that can only be used for approved expenditur­es.

Called an illegal voucher program by critics, the measure is expected to be challenged in court.

Sandoval said the measure was vetted by the Legislatur­e’s legal staff and deemed constituti­onal.

Assembly Bill 394, the school breakup bill, drew sharp criticism as it was rushed through the Senate in the final minutes of the session. After it was approved on a 13-7 vote, Senate Minority Leader Aaron Ford, D-Las Vegas, criticized Majority Leader Michael Roberson, R-Henderson, for not discussing the equity and bonding issues raised by the bill.

“You do not, at this hour, put forth such legislatio­n that is going to negatively affect the people of our communitie­s without giving us the opportunit­y to address the issues,” he said. “Shame on you.”

Finally, new school constructi­on got a huge boost early in the session.

The law will result in constructi­on beginning now on seven “shovel ready” schools in the Clark County School District that will open in the fall of 2017. Five more new schools will be built to open in 2018, and more would follow. Rehabilita­tion of existing schools is part of the proposal too.

 ?? Follow James Tensuan on Twitter @jtensuan
JAMES TENSUAN/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW JOURNAL ?? Gov. Brian Sandoval meets with fourth-grader Jordan Henderson and other students at Kelly Elementary School before a signing ceremony Wednesday for one of three new education spending and reform measures approved in the recent state Legislatur­e session.
Follow James Tensuan on Twitter @jtensuan JAMES TENSUAN/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW JOURNAL Gov. Brian Sandoval meets with fourth-grader Jordan Henderson and other students at Kelly Elementary School before a signing ceremony Wednesday for one of three new education spending and reform measures approved in the recent state Legislatur­e session.

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