I appreciate the effort, but I plan to keep my expectations low.
Citing a recent Texas Supreme Court decision that upheld the state’s public school funding system while deeming it “undeniably imperfect,” state House Speaker Joe Straus on Thursday ordered representatives to study the school finance system and recommend reforms before the 2017 legislative session.
“We can improve educational quality while also making our school finance system more efficient,” Straus said in a news release. “Ignoring some of the problems in our current system will only make them worse. School finance reform never comes quickly or easily, which is why this work needs to continue sooner rather than later.”
Straus requested that the House Public Education and Appropriations committees examine the impact of a soon-expiring provision that has allocated money to school districts to help offset mandated property tax cuts. He also asked the panels to study “the use of local property taxes to fund public education and its effects on educational quality and on Texas taxpayers.”
“As property values have increased, more school districts have become subject to recapture, meaning that some of their local property tax dollars are sent back to the state and distributed to school districts with less property wealth,” according to the news release. “For example, the Houston Independent School District is now facing the prospect of sending a recapture payment of $175 million to the state in 2017. Since 2006, the number of school districts paying recapture has increased from 142 to 238.”
“It’s important that we keep local tax dollars in local districts as much as possible, while still ensuring that all students have access to quality public schools,” Straus said.
[…]
He already has ordered the House to study the Cost of Education Index, one component of the school finance system, along with the debt load and facility needs of fast-growing school districts.
“Combined with those studies, the newly issued charges will allow the House to take a thorough look at school finance when the Legislature convenes in January 2017,” according to the news release.
I trust that Straus has good intentions here, and even with Rep. Jimmie Don Aycock’s retirement, there are plenty of House members who are knowledgeable on school finance issues to take this up. The main problem of course is getting anything worthwhile through the Senate, where Dan Patrick is as obsessed with vouchers as he is with bathrooms. As is so unfortunately often the case, just not taking a step backwards is the main goal for 2017. The Chron and the Rivard Report have more.
Wow. What is there to study?
We already know all the moving parts.
How stupid can the texas legislature be?
wait…
don’t answer that.
All anyone has to do is look at 182 websites and social media and realize that the majority of texas legislators are morons.