Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Nevada schools are crumbling’

Statewide drive debuts to call attention to budgets in public education

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

A statewide campaign launched Tuesday demanded adequate funding for students and highlighte­d Nevada’s position as the worst state in the nation for education and its low ranking for education funding.

Teachers, students and other members of the Fund Our Future Nevada campaign stressed the need for public awareness of the issues, noting that while recent investment­s are helpful, they’re not enough.

“Nevada schools are crumbling,” said Connor Leeming, student body president at Palo Verde High School. “I go to many schools in my services as student body president, and I see teachers being cut, 40-plus kids in a room in core classes, budgets slashed. And although Nevada business is booming, once again our schools remain isolated and forgotten in the shadows.”

The announceme­nt, at Tomiyasu Elementary School in the east valley, focused on marijuana taxes and room taxes as examples of how funding initially intended for education does not end up benefiting it.

The room tax, passed in 2009, was meant to generate money for schools in a supplement­al account. Since 2011, however, that money has

been transferre­d to the Distributi­ve School Account, the state’s main source of education funding.

FUNDING

Critics argue that doing so supplants existing funding for schools rather than supplement­ing it, reducing the state’s burden to school districts’ per-pupil amount.

The tax has raked in roughly

$893.7 million from fiscal year 2012 to 2017, according to figures from the governor’s finance office.

Jenn Blackhurst, president of the advocacy group Hope for Nevada, said legislator­s have continued to balance the state’s budget on the backs of children.

“It’s so frustratin­g for me to hear people complain about our public education and say, ‘We’ve given them money, and they haven’t been able to make any improvemen­ts with it,’” she said. “When in fact people don’t understand that that money hasn’t been used as the voters intended.”

She also pointed to the 10 percent retail tax on recreation­al marijuana,

which was proposed to go to schools but later was diverted to the state’s rainy day fund after a last-minute legislativ­e showdown.

The announceme­nt follows a three-part Review-journal series on the state of education funding in Nevada, which highlighte­d the Silver State as one of only a handful that haven’t been legally challenged over their education funding.

Delaware recently joined the states that have been sued, after the American Civil Liberties Union filed a complaint in January over the state’s funding and resources.

The Review-journal series also found that the Clark County School District’s per-pupil amount from the Distributi­ve School Account has increased only 66 percent since 1967, when accounting for inflation, despite an increasing­ly diverse student population.

Yet recent education initiative­s have sought to address the needs of those students, and Gov. Brian Sandoval has touted his leadership in sealing $470 million for targeted

student population­s in the past two legislativ­e sessions.

“I believe that one of the most important investment­s we can make as a state is the investment we make in our future and in Nevada’s young learners,” Sandoval told the Review-journal in November. “I do not agree with the premise stated by some that insufficie­nt funds have been provided to our counties. I have great respect and appreciati­on for the teaching profession and all educators, and that is why I supported the single largest increase in K-12 education funding in Nevada history.”

The Fund our Future campaign is a look into a potentiall­y hot-button issue for Nevada’s next legislativ­e session, in 2019.

The Nevada Department of Education didn’t respond to a request for comment on the campaign.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4630. Follow @Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

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