Las Vegas Review-Journal

Legislator­s seek school funding plans

Superinten­dents called to testify on how additional $2B will be used

- By Julie Wootton-greener Contact Julie Wootton-greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-387-2921. Follow @ julieswoot­ton on Twitter.

The state’s top Democratic lawmakers called Thursday for school districts to detail how they would use an additional $2 billion in proposed funding.

Assembly Speaker Steve Yeager, D-las Vegas, and Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro, D-las Vegas, say superinten­dents from the state’s 17 school districts and the Nevada State Public Charter School Authority must appear at a joint meeting of finance committees within the next 30 days.

Gov. Joe Lombardo has proposed an additional $2 billion in K-12 public education spending that would lead to a $2,000 increase in per-pupil funding. “Along with this funding, I expect results,” Lombardo said in his State of the State address in January.

Now, school leaders must outline plans for how they will spend the money in a way that improves student achievemen­t.

Yeager also said he plans to introduce legislatio­n requiring greater accountabi­lity and transparen­cy from school districts.

Financial transparen­cy

This month, Lombardo signed an executive order requiring school districts and the charter authority to submit their third-party audits from last year by March 1 to the state for review.

Money spent on public education must yield “measurable and quantifiab­le results in student achievemen­t,” and the status quo is “simply unacceptab­le,” Yeager said in a Thursday news release.

Cannizarro said in the release she is looking forward to hearing from superinten­dents about how they plan to improve student outcomes, retain qualified teachers and staff, and ensure that schools provide a safe and healthy learning environmen­t.

The Clark County Education Associatio­n, a teachers union representi­ng more than 18,000 licensed profession­als in the Clark County School District, said it supports the move.

“With unpreceden­ted investment comes unpreceden­ted accountabi­lity,” the union said in a Thursday statement. “CCEA applauds the Democratic leadership’s demands for school districts to present concrete plans before funds are released for the upcoming school year.”

The union said it presented on Monday an overview of school conditions and recommenda­tions to improve outcomes to the Senate Education Committee.

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