State revenue estimates increase
by $350 million
Supporters of great schools got some good news this
week when the Legislative Fiscal Bureau reported that state revenues
will be $350 million higher than previously anticipated.
Governor Jim Doyle welcomed the news, saying it is
a sign that we can meet our obligations to critical health care
for our seniors and working families while still funding the two-thirds
commitment to education I outlined in my budget.
Funding two-thirds of the cost of every childs
education is a key part of the responsible property tax freeze I have
proposed, Doyle said. With $350 million in unexpected revenue,
there is no reason why the Legislature should not be able to fund education
at the level I proposed making a major commitment to our schools
and delivering historic relief to property taxpayers.
Doyle's budget, which is being reworked by the Republican-controlled
Legislature, would meet the states commitment to pay two-thirds
of the cost of a childs education an investment of $850
million in education and property tax relief.
WEAC members are urged to attend Great
Schools Lobby Day on June 16 and to use the OnWEAC
Cyberlobby to e-mail legislators and ask them to support the governor's
budget plan and to make Great Schools a top proirity during the final
stages of budget debate.
The governor's budget, as presented to the Legislature,
also:
- Provides $3 million in fiscal year 2006-07 to assist school districts
with the initial cost of starting up 4-year-old kindergarten programs.
- Encourages more school districts to implement school breakfast programs
by providing a 50-cent increase in the states reimbursement
rate for school breakfasts.
- Provides additional funding for the state to maintain its current
share of funding for bilingual-bicultural education aid.
- Provides funding to expand the number of advanced placement courses
offered in the state and to enhance gifted and talented student programs
in middle schools.
- Increases funding for special education aid and creates a new program
to provide higher levels of aid to school districts with high-cost,
low-incidence special education students.
- Addresses the concerns of declining-enrollment districts by modifying
the revenue limit calculation to provide these districts greater revenue
limit authority by using either a three- or five-year rolling enrollment
average.
- Provides a $16 million increase in pupil transportation aid over
the biennium while directing greater increases to school districts
with larger geographic service areas and longer travel distances.
- Increases the per-student low revenue ceiling, below which school
districts are exempt from revenue limits, from $7,800 per student
to $8,100 in fiscal year 2005-06 and to $8,400 in 2006-07. Fully funds
shared revenue for local governments to protect vital services like
police and firefighters.
- Provides funding for competitive grants to school districts where
school boards and educators are interested in designing compensation
systems that reward teachers for acquiring skills and knowledge that
have been demonstrated to improve student learning or for accepting
hard-to-staff or challenging teacher assignments.
- Expands the grant program for teachers who receive certification
from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards to include
teachers who receive master teacher licenses under the states
new licensure rules.
- Provides $2.6 million to help experienced teacher mentors for beginning
educators.
- Repeals the Qualified Economic Offer law, although this provision
has already been stripped from the budget by Republican legislative
leaders.
Resource page on the 2005-07 state budget
Posted May 20, 2005