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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Last Hurdle: Cutting Funds to TX School Districts

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Friday, May 27, 2011   

SAN ANTONIO, Texas - One of the last hurdles before lawmakers can finalize a new state budget is school financing. State aid will likely be cut by about $4 billion over the next two years. The sticking point is whether to divide per-student cuts equally among districts, or to ask wealthier districts to take a bigger hit - or something in between. While cutting equally may sound fair, less-wealthy districts say they're already operating with fewer dollars.

Dr. Albert Cortez is director of policy for the Intercultural Development Research Association (IDRA). He says, as a result of flaws in the current school finance structure, the gap between the 100 wealthiest districts and the 100 poorest is $1450 per student.

"When we're talking about low- and average-wealth districts, we're talking about 90 percent of the districts in the system. And does it make sense to try to work out a compromise to protect the 'golden 100'?"

Cortez predicts lawmakers who vote to protect the advantages of the top ten percent will face a backlash at the ballot box. Failure to resolve the issue by the weekend could mean a special session for the Legislature.

When state aid is reduced, Cortez points out that local governments will be burdened with deciding how to make up for the shortfall. Districts with bigger budgets, he says, will be able to trim the kinds of optional programs and services that aren't even available elsewhere. Poorer districts, meanwhile, will have to cut to the bone.

"Lower-wealth districts are going to be talking about cutting teacher salaries, support staff, dropout prevention programs, programs with special-needs students. The choices are going to be very different."

Cortez supports a special legislative session this summer, saying the complexities of a school finance plan deserve more than hasty attention at the tail end of the regular session. He says the public needs a chance to weigh in on, not just how to spread the cuts, but also whether to reduce them by tapping the state's "rainy day fund," if not permanently fixing the school finance formula.



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