Current:Home > MyKentucky House boosts school spending but leaves out guaranteed teacher raises and universal pre-K -AdvancementTrade
Kentucky House boosts school spending but leaves out guaranteed teacher raises and universal pre-K
View
Date:2025-04-23 19:06:05
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — The Republican-led Kentucky House endorsed higher spending for education in its two-year state spending plan on Thursday but left out two of the Democratic governor’s top priorities — guaranteed pay raises for teachers and access to preschool for every 4-year-old.
The budget measure, which won 77-19 House passage after hours of debate, would pump massive sums of additional money into the state’s main funding formula for K-12 schools. In a key policy decision, the GOP bill leaves it up to local school districts to decide teacher pay but encourages school administrators to award raises to teachers and other personnel. Each district would decide the amount of raises.
The House version has no funding for the governor’s ambitious universal pre-K proposal. The executive branch budget bill — the state’s main policy document — now heads to the GOP-dominated Senate.
Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear called for a guaranteed 11% pay raise for teachers and all other public school employees in the spending blueprint he submitted to lawmakers. He says its needed to recruit and retain teachers. He proposed spending $172 million in each of the next two fiscal years to provide preschool for every Kentucky 4-year-old. The goal would be to make every child ready for kindergarten.
Rep. Derrick Graham, the top-ranking House Democrat, said during the long House debate that the GOP plan came up short for K-12 teachers at a time of massive state budget reserves. He pointed to Kentucky’s rankings near the bottom nationally in average teacher starting pay and average teacher pay.
“This budget will not begin to make a dent in our low state ranking,” Graham said.
Republican Rep. Jason Petrie said the budget plan reflects a policy decision showing a “fidelity to local control, so that the state is not setting the pay scale.”
Petrie, who chairs the House Appropriations and Revenue Committee, staunchly defended the level of state support for K-12 education in the House bill. He said it would deliver more than $1.3 billion in funding increases for the biennium. “It is well supported,” he said.
Beshear proposed more than $2.5 billion of additional funding for public education in his proposal.
House Democrats highlighted what they saw as shortcomings in the GOP spending plan, saying it underfunded water projects and failed to support affordable housing initiatives.
Republican Rep. Kevin Bratcher called it a responsible budget and offered a response to the Democratic criticism.
“They just say, ‘spend, spend, spend, spend,’” Bratcher said. “And that’s dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb.”
Much of the House debate focused on education funding — always a cornerstone of the state budget.
The House plan would bolster per-pupil funding under SEEK, the state’s main funding formula for K-12 schools. The amount would go to $4,368 — a $117 million increase — in the first fiscal year and $4,455 in the second year — a $154 million increase. The current amount is $4,200 per student.
The House’s budget plan offered another sweetener for school districts. It would increase state spending to transport K-12 students to and from school, with the state covering 100% of those costs in the second year of the biennium. Beshear called for the state to fully fund those costs in both years. In the House plan, the state would cover 80% of those costs in the first year of the two-year cycle, which begins July 1.
The House plan also makes sizeable investments in mental health and substance abuse recovery programs. It includes funding to hire 100 more social workers and to award pay raises to state police troopers and commercial vehicle enforcement officers. It calls for an additional $196 million in funding for the College Access Program, a needs-based grant initiative for Kentucky undergraduate students.
Crafting a budget is the top priority for lawmakers during this year’s 60-day session, and the House action was another step in that process. The focus now shifts to the Senate, which will put its imprint on the two-year spending plan. The final version will be hashed out by a conference committee made up of House and Senate leaders. Both chambers have Republican supermajorities.
veryGood! (45278)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Why are states like Alabama, which is planning to use nitrogen gas, exploring new execution methods?
- House fire traps, kills 5 children: How the deadly blaze in Indiana unfolded
- Testy encounters between lawyers and judges a defining feature of Trump’s court cases so far
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- NYC joins a growing wave of local governments erasing residents' medical debt
- Churches, temples and monasteries regularly hit by airstrikes in Myanmar, activists say
- Burton Wilde: Left-Side Trading and Right-Side Trading in Stocks.
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda migration bill suffers a blow in Britain’s Parliament
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Michelle Trachtenberg slams comments about her appearance: 'This is my face'
- Norman Jewison, acclaimed director of ‘In the Heat of the Night’ and ‘Moonstruck,’ dead at 97
- Saudi Arabia hears dozens of countries critique its human rights record at the UN in Geneva
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Cyprus police vow tougher screening of soccer fans in a renewed effort to clamp down on violence
- California State University faculty launch weeklong strike across 23 campuses
- Woman charged with killing Hollywood consultant Michael Latt pleads not guilty
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
'The Bachelor' contestants: Meet the cast of women vying for Joey Graziadei's heart
Valerie Bertinelli Shares Shocked Reaction to Not Being Asked Back to Kids Baking Championship
Burton Wilde :I teach you how to quickly understand stock financial reports.
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Zendaya and Hunter Schafer's Reunion at Paris Fashion Week Is Simply Euphoric
Trade resumes as Pakistan and Afghanistan reopen Torkham border crossing after 10 days
Dutch court convicts pro-Syrian government militia member of illegally detaining, torturing civilian