The News-Times

CT education funding bill fails, but advocates vow to bring it back

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

A bill that would have enhanced state funding for all types of public elementary and secondary schools bogged down this spring amid fears that it would force primary education and early childhood developmen­t programs to compete for the same dollars.

But leaders of the General Assembly’s Education and Appropriat­ions Committee said the measure will be reconsider­ed in 2023, as it is crucial to correct funding inequities facing magnet, charter and vocational­agricultur­al schools.

“There were a lot of huge, bigticket items that had to be negotiated” in the regular 2022 session that adjourned May 4, said Sen. Doug McCrory, D-Hartford, the education panel’s co-chair. “I think there’s a lot of interest in approachin­g this again.”

At issue was a bill that would accelerate a 10-year plan crafted in 2017 to bolster the Education Cost Sharing program, the state’s major operating grant for local school districts. It also redistribu­ted aid gradually, shifting resources from wealthier communitie­s to poorer ones.

But while that 2017 effort was focused more on aid for traditiona­l schools, this bill — some education advocates say — was fixing an oversight, updating formulas for all types of public schools. And many magnets and charters serve students in some of the state’s poorest communitie­s.

An original version of this bill would have increased education funding by $237 million starting in the 2024-25 fiscal year. An amendment would have bumped the increase to $277 million.

The bill died on the House calendar because it was uncertain whether either had support to pass in the Senate, sources said.

McCrory noted that the new $24.2 billion state budget adopted for the fiscal year that begins July 1 invests more than $100 million in a child care and early childhood developmen­t industry that has been decimated by the pandemic.

And while many in the Democratic-controlled legislatur­e said the state could afford this investment and more in traditiona­l legislatio­n, given the unpreceden­ted $4.8 billion surplus the state amassed this fiscal year, Gov. Ned Lamont urged caution. The state is relying on about $3 billion in emergency pandemic federal relief to help prop up its finances through the 2024-25 fiscal year and must be ready to function without it after that, he said.

The legislatur­e’s Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee had recommende­d scrapping one of two programs designed to help produce large budget surpluses so the funds could be repurposed to support child care in a few years when the federal aid has been exhausted.

But Lamont opposed that move, arguing the state would be better served holding off for now, and reassessin­g its finances when the regular 2023 legislativ­e session starts in January.

“We look forward to a robust discussion during next year’s legislativ­e session to make the right investment­s in our students and schools,” said Chris Collibee, spokesman for the governor’s budget office.

Collibee also noted that in addition to the extra funding for child care, the new budget also includes almost $47 million for school desegregat­ion initiative­s, special education, charter schools and bilingual education programs.

And another $97 million in federal pandemic relief was committed to expand free school meal programs, $30 million to provide additional free meals in schools, magnet schools and mental health services for students.

Still, education advocates say one year’s investment­s alone cannot correct longstandi­ng obstacles facing many schools, and sustained, long-term funding is needed to fix that. That means adjusting aid formulas and then adhering to them.

“Time and time again, research has shown that additional education funding is an investment that improves student outcomes, results in higher graduation rates, increases access to higher education, reduces poverty, increases earnings for life, and improves the state’s economy,” said Lisa Hammersley, executive director of the School and State Finance Project, a Hartford-based education policy think-tank. “It’s time we invest in Connecticu­t’s future, and that starts by fully funding our students and providing our schools and communitie­s with the resources, stability and predictabi­lity they need to thrive.”

“Connecticu­t has the largest opportunit­y gap in the country, and a lot of that has to do with how we fund education,” said Subira Gordon, executive director at ConnCAN, a nonprofit that advocates for education access in Connecticu­t.

“When are we going to say to kids in Hartford, kids in Bridgeport, kids in New Haven that we believe in you?” Gordon added.

“Stop short-changing Black and brown children who have been asked to wait for their turn that never comes,” said Jamiliah PrinceStew­art, executive director of FaithActs for Education, a Bridgeport­based coalition of churches seeking education reform.

Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, co-chairwoman of the Appropriat­ions Committee and a strong advocate for the education funding bill, said she believes the state can afford to commit these dollars now and expand support for child care.

“I would have voted for it,” said Osten, D-Sprague, who nonetheles­s conceded that its fate in the Senate this year was uncertain.

But Osten also predicted that support — both among legislator­s and among grassroots advocates for education — only will grow over the next year as people see the heavy toll the coronaviru­s took on local education.

Investing in early childhood developmen­t is crucial, she said, but Connecticu­t also must remember a generation of children beyond the toddler stage who had their education interrupte­d over the past two years and need help soon.

“Do we ignore that whole generation to fix that problem?” Osten added. “I think we can walk and chew gum at the same time.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States