Rural Advocates Fight for Local Schools
In recent months, new and old advocacy organizations
in the rural areas of several states have fought for
better funding for local community schools.
Parents' Campaign in Mississippi
In Mississippi, a new advocacy organization called
The
Parents' Campaign is trying to "mobilize
parents to lobby for full education funding."
The organization was launched in June and hopes to have
50,000 network members by the time the new legislative
session begins in January 2007.
The goal of The Parents' Campaign is to mobilize parents
to push the legislature to support public education,
first and foremost by providing full funding for the
Mississippi Adequate Education Program (MAEP), a funding
formula passed in 1997 but which has not been fully
funded in any year except 2003. Currently, MAEP is underfunded
by $120 million, according to the Jackson
Clarion Ledger, and the Parents' Campaign hopes
to change that in 2007. The Campaign plans to keep parents
educated and informed about school funding and other
public education issues, let parents know how to contact
their legislators, and report to voters how legislators
have voted on education issues.
Two Advocacy Efforts in Arkansas
Two separate efforts are being made to help schools
in Arkansas. From August 25-27, the Arkansas Citizens
First Congress held its second convention of the year.
The congress is a coalition of over 50 grassroots community
groups that works with community activists to create
legislative agendas and lobbies for those agendas. The
congress comprises a variety of advocacy organizations,
and their top priorities include agricultural issues,
public education, and tax reform. The primary purpose
of the August conference was to finalize the 2007 legislative
agenda. One of the main educational issues discussed
was the racial and socio-economic achievement gap. The
keynote address, delivered by Rebecca Jacobsen of Teachers
College and the Economic Policy Institute, was entitled,
"Thinking Beyond the Classroom: Reforms to Close
the Achievement Gap," in which she discussed health
care, housing, and other issues' impacts on the achievement
gap.
In July, Advocates
for Community and Rural Education (ACRE), a community
organization that works to improve rural schools, launched
its Quality Schools Initiative. ACRE's goal is to get
citizens involved at both the local and state levels
in order to identify rural schools that are threatened
by fiscal problems, academic problems, or school closings,
and to take steps to save those schools.
Ballot Initiative in Idaho
In Idaho, the Invest
in Our Kids' Education campaign is supporting an
initiative on the November ballot – the Idaho
Local Public Schools Investment Act Initiative.
The Initiative would raise the sales tax in Idaho by
one percent and put all of the revenue (an estimated
$210 million) from the increase into a new "Idaho
Local Public Schools Investment Fund," which could
only be used for funding public schools. This spring,
Invest in Our Kids' Education collected the 50,000 signatures
required to put the measure on the ballot as Proposition
1.
On August 25, however, the legislature met in a special
session to pass
a tax reform plan proposed by Governor Jim Risch
that cut $260 million of property taxes designated for
education funding and replaced the money with a one
percent sales tax increase and part of the state's budget
surplus. In this context, if Proposition 1 passes it
would require the legislature to find $210 million to
add to the education budget without cutting any crucial
services. Invest in Our Kids fears that simply switching
a portion of school funding from a property tax –
which is specifically dedicated to school funding –
to a sales tax – which is a less stable source
of revenue and would also be subject to the Legislature's
discretion – puts school funding at risk. Idaho
currently near the bottom among the states in per-pupil
expenditures, according to the NCES.
Success for Rural Advocates in Nebraska
Grassroots advocacy was instrumental in defeating a
school funding bill in Nebraska that would have hurt
rural schools. The bill, LB 129, would have changed
the state school finance formula to shift funding away
from rural districts. A strong grassroots campaign led
by the Nebraska
Coalition for Educational Equity and Adequacy put
pressure on the legislature to reject the bill, and
LB 129 died in committee when the legislative session
ended in April, 2006.
Fighting School Closings in Maine and West
Virginia
Small rural schools in Maine are concerned about Maine's
funding formula, which is pressuring small schools to
make possibly unsustainable budget cuts. A prominent
example of opposition to the funding formula came in
February, when parents
and community members from the town of Columbia Falls
participated in a 128-mile, five-day
march to the state Capitol in Augusta and held a
rally on the State House steps. The school funding formula
released by Maine's Department of Education reduces
by $313,000 the amount of state funding that their district
will receive for the 2006-07 school year. Without enough
state funding, the district says it might be forced
to close schools. Parents and school boards are pushing
legislators to revise the formula by the 2007-2008 academic
year.
Where schools in rural districts are closed, children
face the potential for extremely long bus rides. This
is particularly a concern for the advocacy organization
Challenge
West Virginia, which notes that West Virginia spends
almost seven percent of its education budget –
more than any other state – on busing. Challenge
West Virginia advocated strongly this year for H.B.
4040, a bill that would have required voter approval
for closure or consolidation of certain schools. While
the bill passed the House of Delegates by a 93-3 vote,
the measure died in the Senate. Challenge West Virginia
plans to continue the fight in the next legislative
session.
Prepared by Matthew Samberg, August 30, 2006
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