Sebelius to sign school finance bill

? Gov. Kathleen Sebelius today said she will sign into law a three-year, $466.2 million increase for public schools that was approved by lawmakers late Tuesday.

“It took some late nights, some frank conversations, and a little bit of prodding from back home, but we’ve now seen legislators make a real commitment to our schools, and to our state’s long-term prosperity,” Sebelius said in a written statement.

Once becoming law, the measure would be reviewed by the Kansas Supreme Court, which has ordered increased school funding.

Alan Rupe, an attorney for the plaintiff school districts that successfully sued for more funding, said the measure falls far short of the spending levels described in the court’s recommended study on the actual costs of education.

“It’s not enough,” Rupe said of the funding, adding that the increased spending approved is “in the wrong places.”

“What has happened, to no one’s surprise, is the House and Senate have politicized a process that the courts have indicated are not a political process,” Rupe said. “They need to focus on the costs of education.”

But Sebelius said the plan addressed many of the court’s concerns.

“We all agreed we needed a plan that helped every school in Kansas, focused on children in poverty, and helped close the achievement gap,” she said.

The school funding plan passed in dramatic fashion Tuesday after a lockdown in the Senate that lasted 45 minutes with the vote stuck at 20-18.

Two legislators were absent — one, Sen. Roger Reitz of Manhattan, was believed to be out of state — and the Senate was waiting for them to show up.

Then Sen. Dwayne Umbarger, R-Thayer, switched his vote to yes to give the measure the required 21 votes right before midnight. Sen. Kay O’Connor, R-Olathe, raced back to the Capitol to vote against the proposal to make the final 21-18 margin.

O’Connor said she would have arrived earlier but was stopped by a Highway Patrol checkpoint on the turnpike.

“I guess it was a sobriety check,” she said. “They looked at me and let me go.”

Lawmakers returned to the Capitol today to consider tax cuts for businesses, the final budget bill and campaign finance on what will be the 15th day of the wrap-up — one short of the record 16 days in 2002. Leaders said they hoped to end the session today.

The school finance measure may have come too late for hundreds of children in Lawrence who start kindergarten in August.

Lawrence Supt. Randy Weseman had wanted to start full-day kindergarten then, but because lawmakers wouldn’t commit to funding more than the current half-day kindergarten, Weseman pulled the plug on the proposal Monday.

“I’m going to start a task force so that whenever the money gets right we’re ready to go,” he said.

Under the new plan, Lawrence will get a $2.8 million increase from the state in the coming school year and will be able to raise more local property taxes for schools.

How they voted

Here is how area legislators voted on the three-year, $466.2 million school funding plan. The House approved it 66-54; the Senate, 21-18.

House

Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, Yes

Anthony Brown, R-Eudora, No

Paul Davis, D-Lawrence, Yes

Tom Holland, D-Baldwin, Yes

Joe Humerickhouse, R-Osage City, No

Ann Mah, D-Topeka, Yes

Tom Sloan, R-Lawrence, Yes

Lee Tafanelli, R-Ozawkie, No

Senate

Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, Yes

Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, Yes

Roger Pine, R-Lawrence, Yes

Rep. Tom Sloan, R-Lawrence, voted for the proposal, which passed 66-54 in the House, partly, he said, because he thought the bill would allow the Lawrence district to reconsider full-day kindergarten.

“It gives Lawrence flexibility so that they can use some funds for all-day kindergarten and other programs that seem popular in the community,” he said.

In the Senate, Lawrence senators – Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, and Roger Pine, R-Lawrence – supported the finance measure.

“The most important thing to many of our school boards and school districts and schoolchildren is to be able to plan for the coming year,” Francisco said.

“I’ve been in support of education for a long time. The challenge is to do that and balance the budget at the same time and be fiscally responsible.

“I felt like we had gone as far as we were probably going to go,” Pine said.

Cost study comparison

The Kansas Supreme Court has ruled the $3 billion school finance system unconstitutional because of underfunding, especially to large districts with high percentages of low-income students.

The court has told lawmakers to use a cost study to guide their appropriations.

But the plan fails to meet the price tag rung up by the cost study that was done by the Legislative Division of Post Audit.

That cost study called for a $400 million increase next year, while the Legislature’s three-year proposal would increase funding by $194.5 million next year.

The plan also falls far short of funding what the cost study recommends for programs that serve students who are at risk of failing.

And the study called for $53.8 million to be divided among four urban school districts that have a high proportion of poor students. The new plan allocates $22.7 million and spreads that over 37 school districts.

But House Speaker Doug Mays, R-Topeka, said he thought the proposal did a good job of matching up with the study’s goals.

“I don’t think it’s all that far off from the Post Audit,” he said.

Sloan agreed: “It addresses the issues raised by the Supreme Court last year as we move toward equal educational opportunities.”

Rupe said that obviously wasn’t true.

“The plan doesn’t measure up,” he said. “The Legislature has started dividing in half all the numbers to get to a political compromise.”

Odd coalition

The proposal was carried in the House by an odd coalition of Democrats, who have voted for bigger increases, and mostly rural Republicans, who have voted against bigger increases.

But on this plan a number of the rural Republicans moved over to the “Yes” column because the plan included significant increases in base state aid per pupil, which helps their smaller districts.

A number of Johnson County Republicans, who earlier had teamed with Democrats for larger plans, were left out in the cold. Many Johnson County legislators have sought the authority of unlimited local property taxes to increase school aid. But that provision is capped in the bill.