Senate and Assembly Republicans are rumored to be close to
having a deal on K-12 education funding and could vote as early as this
Thursday, June 22. Joint Finance Committee Co-Chair John Nygren (R-Marinette) told Committee members to keep the date open for a possible vote, but nothing has been officially scheduled at this time.
Assembly Republicans developed their own K-12 funding proposal, which they released two weeks ago, and Senate Republicans are working on a plan of their own which is closer to what the Governor had proposed but provides additional funding to low-spending school districts.
Governor Walker had proposed a $649 million increase to K-12
education funding but Assembly Republicans would
decrease this amount by $70 million and provide additional resources to
low-spending school districts. The Assembly Republican plan also includes
about $9.1 million annually to provide grants to schools to provide “personal
electronic computing devices.” Public, private and charter schools could
apply for grants equal to $125 per 9th grade student to pay for any
of the following: purchasing personal electronic computing devices; purchasing
software for the devices; purchasing curriculum that includes content that may
be accessed on the personal computing devices; or training professional staff
on how to effectively incorporate personal electronic devices into a classroom
and into high school curriculum.
If you haven’t done so already, now is the time to
contact your state representative and state senator and ask them to support the
Governor’s proposed increase to K-12 funding.
WEMTA has also been monitoring the following items, which
were included in the Governor’s proposal:
·
Library Service Contracts: the Governor’s
proposal provides an additional $10,300 over the budget biennium
to fully fund the Library Service Contracts. The
Assembly Republican plan makes no changes to this.
·
Eliminating Expiration Dates for Teacher and
Administrator Licenses: the Governor’s proposal includes a concerning
requirement that would eliminate expiration dates for teaching and
administrator licenses. Teachers and administrators would no longer need to
renew their licenses and there would be no ongoing professional development
requirements. Instead, school boards would be required to conduct background
checks on everyone who holds a teaching or administrator’s license at least
once every five years. The Assembly Republican proposal makes some
modifications to the Governor’s proposal. Their proposal includes Milwaukee
Public Schools and independent charter schools in the requirement to conduct
background checks every five years and grants provisional three-year licenses
to new educators, administrators and pupil services professionals. Under the
Assembly Republican plan, a lifetime license could only be granted after
completion of six semesters of experience. The Assembly Republican plan also
requires DPI to update PI 34, the administrative rules for teacher licensure,
to simplify the process by January 1, 2018.
·
Newsline for the Blind: the Governor’s
proposal provides an additional $52,200 over the budget biennium to fully fund
Newsline for the Blind costs. The Assembly Republican plan makes no changes to
this.
·
Online Bullying Prevention: the
Governor’s proposal provides $150,000 for grants to a nonprofit organization to
provide training and an online bullying prevention curriculum for pupils in
grades kindergarten through eight. The Assembly Republican plan accepts the
Governor’s proposal.
·
Sparsity Aid for Rural Districts: the
Governor’s proposal increases sparsity aid funding by $20 million. Per pupil
payments for districts that meet sparsity aid requirements would increase by
$100 for a total payment of $400 per pupil. It also creates a second-tier of
sparsity aid for districts that have enrollment between 745 and 1,000 with a
population density of less than 10 students per square mile. The Assembly
Republican proposal rejects the Governor’s proposals to increase sparsity
payments.
·
Milwaukee Performance Funding: the
Governor’s proposal creates a new $5.6 million performance funding program for
Milwaukee schools. $1.9 million will be distributed to schools that
“significantly exceed expectations” or “exceed expectations” on the school
report card. $3.6 million will go to schools that increase their numeric score
by at least three points on the school report card. The Assembly Republican
plan is silent on this provision.
·
Milwaukee Summer School Grants: the
Governor’s proposal provides $1.4 million for summer school grants to
Milwaukee public schools. Grants would help schools develop, redesign or
implement a summer school program to increase pupil attendance, improve
academic achievement or expose pupils to innovative learning activities. The
Assembly Republican plan is silent on this provision.
How to Contact Your
Legislators:
The first step in
contacting your legislator is knowing who your legislator is. The easiest way
to do this is the tool found on the Legislature’s home page, at http://legis.wisconsin.gov. In the right-hand side of that page is a link that says
Find My Legislators! Type your address in the box below that link to get
the names of your state representative and senator.
· Phone.
You may leave a message for your legislator’s Capitol office or indicate your
position on legislation through the toll free Legislative Hotline, at 1-800-362-9472.
· E-mail. The
e-mail addresses of members of the Wisconsin Legislature all have the same
format. For members of the Assembly, the form is Rep.Jones@legis.wisconsin.gov; for members of the Senate, the form
is Sen.Adams@legis.wisconsin.gov
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