Current:Home > NewsMississippi House votes to change school funding formula, but plan faces hurdles in the Senate -ProfitEdge
Mississippi House votes to change school funding formula, but plan faces hurdles in the Senate
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-07 12:05:56
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The Mississippi House voted Wednesday to set a new formula to calculate how much money the state will spend on public schools — a step toward abandoning a formula that has put generations of legislators under political pressure because they have fully funded it only two years since it was put into law in 1997.
The proposal is in House Bill 1453, which passed with broad bipartisan support on a vote of 95-13.
Work is far from finished. The bill will move to the Senate, which is also controlled by Republicans and has a separate proposal to revise but not abandon the current formula, known as the Mississippi Adequate Education Program.
MAEP is designed to give school districts enough money to meet midlevel academic standards. Senators tried to revise it last year, but that effort fell short.
The formula proposed by the House is called INSPIRE — Investing in the Needs of Students to Prioritize, Impact and Reform Education. Republican Rep. Kent McCarty of Hattiesburg said it would create a more equitable way of paying for schools because districts would receive extra money if they have large concentrations of poverty or if they enroll large numbers of students who have special needs or are learning English as a second language.
“This puts money in the pockets of the districts that need it the most,” McCarty, vice chairman of the House Education Committee, said Wednesday.
Republican Rep. Rob Roberson of Starkville, the committee chairman, said INSPIRE would put more money into public schools than has ever been spent in Mississippi, one of the poorest states in the U.S.
“It bothers me that we have children out there that do not get a good education in this state,” Roberson said. “It should make you mad, too.”
Full funding of MAEP would cost nearly $3 billion for the budget year that begins July 1, according to the state Department of Education. That would be about $643 million more than the state is spending on the formula during the current year, an increase of about 17.8%.
Democratic Rep. Bob Evans of Monticello asked how full funding of INSPIRE would compare to full funding of MAEP.
McCarty — noting that he was only 3 years old when MAEP was put into law — said legislators are not discussing fully funding the formula this session. He said INSPIRE proposes putting $2.975 billion into schools for the coming year, and that would be “more money than the Senate is proposing, more money than we’ve ever even thought about proposing on this side of the building.”
McCarty also said, though, that decisions about fully funding INSPIRE would be made year by year, just as they are with MAEP.
Affluent school districts, including Madison County and Rankin County in the Jackson suburbs, would see decreases in state funding under INSPIRE, McCarty said.
Nancy Loome is director of the Parents’ Campaign, a group that has long pushed legislators to fully fund MAEP. She cautioned in a statement that the House proposal would eliminate “an objective formula for the base per-student cost, which is supposed to reflect the true cost of educating a Mississippi student to proficiency in core subjects.”
“Any total rewrite of our school funding formula needs careful, deliberate thought with input from those most affected by it: public school educators and parents of children in public schools,” Loome said.
Under the House proposal, a 13-member group made up mostly of educators would recommend revisions at least once every four years in the per-student cost that would be the base of the INSPIRE formula. The cost would be adjusted for inflation each year.
Twenty-one school districts sued the state in August 2014, seeking more than $235 million to make up for shortfalls from 2010 to 2015 — some of the years when lawmakers didn’t fully fund MAEP. The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled in 2017 that legislators are not obligated to spend all the money required by the formula.
veryGood! (49)
Related
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Former Gambian interior minister on trial in Switzerland over alleged crimes against humanity
- Norwegian mass killer begins second attempt to sue state for alleged breach of human rights
- Arizona faces a $1 billion deficit as the state Legislature opens the 2024 session
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Better than Brady? Jim Harbaugh's praise for JJ McCarthy might not be hyperbole
- Blinken meets Jordan’s king and foreign minister on Mideast push to keep Gaza war from spreading
- Cyprus president shakes up cabinet, replacing ministers of defense, health, justice and environment
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Will Changes to Medicare Coverage Improve the Mental Health Gap?
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Jennifer Lawrence Complaining About Her Awful Wedding Day Is So Relatable
- Some 350,000 people applied for asylum in Germany in 2023, up 51% in a year
- Reese Witherspoon, Heidi Klum bring kids Deacon, Leni to Vanity Fair event
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Atlanta Falcons fire coach Arthur Smith hours after season-ending loss to New Orleans Saints
- Raise a Glass to Billie Eilish, Emma Stone and More Stars at 2024 Golden Globes After-Parties
- Michael Penix's long and winding career will end with Washington in CFP championship game
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Halle Bailey and boyfriend DDG welcome first child
Cyprus president shakes up cabinet, replacing ministers of defense, health, justice and environment
Defendant who attacked judge in wild courtroom video will face her again in Las Vegas
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Horoscopes Today, January 6, 2024
Some 350,000 people applied for asylum in Germany in 2023, up 51% in a year
Golden Globes 2024: Sam Claflin Reveals How Stevie Nicks Reacted to Daisy Jones & the Six