Focus on education funding, foreign trade

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We’ve hit our stride at the end of week three of the 2013 legislative session.  Committee work, bill drafting, issue briefings, and constituent visits keep me and my fellow legislators busy during the session start-up.

Our first order of business this year should be to set the rate for school funding.  Called allowable growth, the Legislature is mandated by code to set the rate 30 days after the Governor releases the budget.  This gives schools about 18 months advance notice concerning what state funds they will receive.  Then local school boards begin to set their budgets. 

Last session, we should have set the allowable growth rate for the school year that will begin in August 2013.  While the Senate passed a bill, the house majority and Governor Branstad refused to bring it up.   Without cooperation this year, local schools face even greater challenges.  

How is the situation developing this year?  The good news is that Senate Democrats took quick action and sent a bill to the house this week.  It sets allowable growth at 4% and provides extra state resources to school districts so they can hold the line on property taxes.  The bad news is Governor Branstad has put up an unnecessary roadblock.  In the opening week of session, he issued an ultimatum to the legislature; no discussion of school funding until his education reform package is passed.   His budget also assumes zero allowable growth for the next two years.

So what does this mean for our schools?  A recent survey of Iowa school superintendents revealed that if the house majority and the Governor do nothing on school funding again this year, or insist on zero growth, this will lead to larger class sizes, delays in upgrading materials, layoff of teachers and classroom associates.

Iowa’s kids can’t afford inaction from the house majority and the Governor.  We can’t ask schools to do more when they can’t keep up with the basics like rising health care, transportation, and energy costs.   It is irresponsible to use state aid for our schools as a bargaining chip for education reform.

This session, I return to familiar assignments; Environmental Protection, and Agriculture.  Minority House Leader Kevin McCarthy of Des Moines, once again, selected me as Ranking Member of the Administration and Regulations Budget Committee.

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