Morning Sun

Senate passes 5% base funding increase for schools

- By David Eggert

LANSING » The Republican­led Michigan Senate on Wednesday approved a 5% increase in base funding for K-12 schools but pared back Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s proposals to recruit and retain teachers and did not include her proposed $1 billion fund for school infrastruc­ture projects.

The $17.8 billion school aid bill, which was advanced 20-15 along mostly party lines, sets the stage for broader budget talks with the Democratic governor and the House, where majority Republican­s planned to start passing their blueprint Wednesday.

The base per-student grant would rise by $450, to $9,150, under the Senate’s 2022-23 proposal — slightly more than Whitmer’s suggested $435. A $500 million grant program would be created to help combining districts retire some of their debt to avoid raising property taxes. Schools could get $50 more per pupil to address pandemic-related learning loss.

Sen. Wayne Schmidt, a Traverse City Republican who oversees the school budget, called it a “very good first start.”

Democrats unsuccessf­ully tried amending the bill so it would more closely align with what the governor outlined in February.

Whitmer has called for $1 billion to be spent upgrading school buildings over six years, which is not in the Senate plan.

She wants $2.3 billion over this fiscal year and the next to recruit and retain educators. That would include awarding annual bonuses to teachers and other staff, competitiv­e college scholarshi­ps to would-be educators, stipends to student teachers and “growyour-own” grants to help districts support staff who want to become certified as teachers. The Senate bill has about $30 million, mostly for student teachers.

Additional retention and recruitmen­t funding would ensure that educators “have the support and recognitio­n they deserve for the challengin­g and essential work that they do,” said Sen. Winnie Brinks, a Grand Rapids Democrat who voted against the legislatio­n.

The bill also would allocate less than what the governor requested for student mental health and school safety.

Schmidt said nothing is finalized and funding could be added during negotiatio­ns. He noted that the legislatio­n would expand the number of school-based health clinics and boost aid to train and retail mental health staff.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States