Montana, Ohio & Oregon Advocates Push for Better
Funding
With the 2006 midterm elections behind them, education
advocacy organizations across the country are lobbying
the newly elected state legislatures for increased education
funding.
Oregon Statewide Citizens’ Corps
On December 12, Oregon’s Chalkboard
Project announced formation of a “statewide
citizens’ corps” to lead its advocacy efforts
in 2007. The new citizens’ corps – comprising
parents, educators, businesspeople, civic volunteers
and leaders, community members, and students from across
the state – will take a lead role in Chalkboards’s
efforts to organize community action and lobby for the
implementation of its 2007 legislative priorities.
Chalkboard, a non-profit education advocacy organization,
was founded in 2004, and since then its members have
traveled around the state and connected with over 100,000
Oregonians to gain ideas from the public on how to improve
schools. Chalkboard has studied the policy and fiscal
implications of plans for improving public schools,
and in September it released its 2007 legislative priorities.
The prioirities include: establishing a guaranteed base
level of state spending per student, to be updated each
year based on empirical data; creating programs to determine
best financial practices by districts and having independent
review of districts’ financial practices; reforming
school employee benefits in order to lower Oregon’s
spending on employee health benefits down to the national
average; lowering class sizes and providing individualized
support in early grades; and improving the quality of
the teaching force through mentoring programs and development
and implementation of meaningful professional development
programs.
According to Sue Hildick, president of the Chalkboard
Project, “We’re moving forward into 2007
with the strong backing of Oregonians, and our newly
formed citizens’ corps is one more indication
of the kind of appetite and support for change there
is throughout our state.”
Seeking Constitutional Adequacy in Montana
In Montana, a coalition of school districts and education
organizations from across the state is working to ensure
that the state legislature fulfills its constitutional
duty to adequately fund education for all Montana students.
Under the Montana Supreme Court’s 2004
ruling in Columbia Falls v. State, the
state is required to define, determine the cost of,
and provide adequate funding for “a basic system
of free, quality” schools. The legislature defined
a quality education in its 2005 session and increased
funding, but it has yet to cost-out or fully fund the
definition.
The Montana
Quality Education Coalition (MQEC) – whose
member school districts serve over two-thirds of the
state’s students – has contracted with education
finance experts to determine the cost of providing all
Montana students with a quality education, as defined
by the legislature. The results of the study are due
out in January 2007, and MQEC indicates that its member
organizations will use the study as a “measuring
stick” by which to evaluate the legislature’s
actions in their 2007 advocacy efforts.
According to Pete Carparelli, MQEC’s Executive
Director, the coalition is committed to working collaboratively
with the governor’s office, the state Superintendent
of Public Instruction, and the Legislature to “advise
and evaluate” education funding proposals. In
addition, MQEC will seek grassroots support for adequate
funding because, as Carparelli says, local support is
“critical,” as Montana’s legislature
is very closely split. As reported in the Great
Falls Tribune, the new chair of the Montana
House Education committee, Rep. Rick Jore, opposes additional
funding for public schools, federal involvement in public
education, and compulsory attendance laws, and favors
vouchers. Carparelli believes Jore represents a “potential
obstacle” to winning increases in school funding.
The governor’s 2007-2008 proposed budget includes
a biennial increase in education funding of only $90
million, an amount that opponents claim does not even
account for inflation. Lance Melton, Executive Director
of the Montana
School Boards Association put it in the context
of the litigation: “The increase for K-12 public
education proposed for the coming biennium will not
be enough for the state to remedy its violations of…the
Montana Constitution.” Melton added, “There
will be opportunities and challenges ahead as we seek
adequate funding for quality education in the 2007 session.”
Constitutional Amendment in Ohio
In Ohio, a coalition of 11 statewide education organizations
is making a new constitutional amendment the centerpiece
of their 2007 advocacy efforts. The amendment would
make education a fundamental right and require the legislature
to identify the components of a “thorough and
efficient system” of education, determine its
costs, and fully fund it for all Ohio students. The
text of the amendment will be officially released in
January, and the coalition plans to have petitions for
the amendment in the field by February, in order to
have the amendment appear on the November 2007 ballot.
William Phillis, Executive Director of the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding,
one of the organizations involved in writing and promoting
the amendment, believes the amendment is the best chance
for ensuring adequate education funding over the long-term.
Phillis indicated that despite the election of a new
governor who claims education is one of his top priorities,
the state legislature is unlikely to increasing funding
and has “tied one hand” of the new administration
by passing state expenditure limits this year. An amendment
that would require the state to fully fund education
is essential, Phillis said, because “every kid
is entitled to an adequate education.”
Prepared by Matthew Samberg, December 19, 2006
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