The Oklahoman

NM tribal leaders tout educationa­l trust fund

State lags nation in reading, math proficiency

- Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. – Native American leaders said creating a special $50 million trust fund to help finance educationa­l programs within tribal communitie­s in New Mexico, where there are the lowest rates of reading and math proficiency in the country, would be a big step toward improving outcomes for their students.

The leaders packed a legislativ­e committee room Friday at the state Capitol, with many testifying that the proposed trust fund would be an investment in their people and a signal to students that the state believes in them.

Laguna Pueblo Gov. Wilfred Herrera Jr. pointed to a landmark education lawsuit that centered on the state’s failures to provide an adequate education to at-risk students, including Native Americans, English language learners, students with disabiliti­es and those from low-income families. Those groups make up a majority of the state’s student population.

In the nearly five years since the court ruled the state was falling short of its constituti­onal obligation­s, Herrera said legislativ­e efforts and funding allocation­s to address the public education system’s deficiencies have been piecemeal.

“I liken this to putting away resources for our children for the future,” he said of the proposed trust fund.

New Mexico ranks last in fourthand eighth-grade reading and math. The most recent National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress revealed just 21% of fourth graders could read at grade level and fewer than 1 in 5 students could do grade-level math. For eighth graders, proficiencies in reading and math were even more dismal.

Supporters also pointed out when asked by lawmakers that Native American students have the lowest graduation rates among their New Mexico peers.

Democratic Rep. Derrick Lente of Sandia Pueblo, one of the bill’s sponsors, said the trust fund would be establishe­d with a onetime allotment of state money. After a couple of years of earning interest, annual disburseme­nts starting with the 2025 fiscal year could help tribes build their own educationa­l programs.

Siting New Mexico’s financial windfall, Lente said: “This is the time to do it.”

The idea is for tribes to put the money toward programs they believe would have the most benefits for students, he said, rather than have the state dictate how the money is spent.

Many of the Native American leaders and librarians who work with tribal communitie­s said one focus would be on revitalizi­ng Native languages and weaving cultural heritage into lessons.

A separate measure that also won the committee’s approval Friday would amend the Indian Education Act to funnel 50% of the state’s Indian education fund to New Mexico tribes. Tribes would be able to carry over unused allocation­s.

In the landmark case known as Yazzie v. Martinez, the court pointed to low graduation rates, dismal student test proficiencies and high college remediatio­n rates as indicators of how New Mexico was not meeting its constituti­onal obligation to ensure all students were college and career ready.

The court suggested public school funding levels, financing methods and oversight by the state Public Education Department were deficient. However, the court stopped short of prescribin­g specific remedies, and deferred decisions on how to meet obligation­s to lawmakers and the executive branch.

In recent weeks, education officials with Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s administra­tion confirmed they still were working to finalize a draft plan to address the ruling.

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