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School News

Extra funding for 100s of Pa. school districts in question. See if yours could be affected.

Saucon Valley Middle School
Donna S. Fisher
/
For LehighValleyNews.com
A handful of schools in the Lehigh Valley that are considered underfunded could receive extra money to close the "adequacy gap."

HARRISBURG — Top Republican lawmakers who can make or break a budget deal appear skeptical about sending half a billion dollars to some Pennsylvania school districts this year as part of an effort to close the “adequacy gap.”

In his latest budget proposal, Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro proposed sending an additional $494 million to schools deemed chronically underfunded and $32 million more to districts with high property tax burdens.

Those numbers match what the Democratic-controlled state House and GOP-controlled Senate appropriated for those purposes as part of last year’s budget.

“Fairness is in the eye of the beholder.”
State Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R/Indiana)

Despite that previous agreement, state Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R/Indiana) recently questioned the fairness of giving additional funding to 348 of Pennsylvania’s 500 districts.

“Fairness is in the eye of the beholder,” Pittman said during a February budget hearing with the state Education Department.

“And frankly, I think the more we review this adequacy funding formula and the way it treats all the school districts, that there is inherent unfairness within this formula.”

In 2023, Commonwealth Court ruled that Pennsylvania’s spending on public education was inequitable — so much so that it violated the state constitution.

Specifically, the judge found that schools in poorer districts, which don’t have the resources to raise as much money through property taxes, weren’t serving students well enough.

That suit was brought against the state by a group of parents, administrators and advocacy groups.

'What it was designed to do'

For much of 2023 and 2024, lawmakers held hearings and negotiated on how exactly to quantify the funding shortfall.

A commission convened to study the issue eventually came up with the concept of an “adequacy target” — the bar at which a district can serve students at an acceptable level.

That measure sets a baseline of per-student spending, then adds in additional spending based on a district’s student body and factors such as poverty and level of English proficiency.

If a district spends less than the resulting number, it is missing its adequacy target and has an “adequacy gap,” the report said.

“We’re not talking about outcomes. We're putting more dollars into an educational system that's educating fewer students.”
State Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R/Indiana)

Republicans did not vote in favor of the report that recommended the adequacy target, Pittman noted during the budget hearing last month.

Yet he and most members of his caucus voted last year for the budget-related law that codified the adequacy formula.

Pittman said the Commonwealth Court ruling didn’t direct the governor and legislature to set aside an amount of money or prescribe a specific remedy.

“We’re not talking about outcomes,” he said. “We're putting more dollars into an educational system that's educating fewer students.”

Carrie Rowe, acting secretary of education, emphasized at the hearing that the adequacy formula was “determined by the legislature” and is “doing exactly what it was designed to do."

“I think that to drive money to schools that need it the most, based on the adequacy funding formula, does not mean that schools that aren't receiving it don't need funding and wouldn't benefit from increased funding,” Rowe said.

“It simply means that those that are receiving the adequacy supplement are doing so because they are deemed to have been underfunded … for a long period of time.”

'We will be back in court'

Rowe said recipients of adequacy funding have used it to provide full-day kindergarten, add security features, improve curriculums and hire counselors.

She said 115 of the state’s 168 rural districts have gotten some of this money.

Public education advocates viewed last year’s investment of nearly $500 million as a down payment on closing a $4.5 billion gap.

But even annual investment at that level will address the disparity too slowly, they say, and those involved in the funding lawsuit have warned that additional legal action is possible.

Shapiro and the legislature must agree to a budget deal before the June 30 deadline.

For schools statewide, Shapiro’s budget pitches an additional $75 million for basic education and $40 million more for special education — much smaller increases than in recent years.

State Sen. Lindsey Williams (D/Allegheny) said during the hearing she is concerned many of her districts will get very little additional money despite rising costs.

The same report that proposed adequacy gap spending also called for at least $200 million in new basic education funding annually.

The Shapiro administration endorsed that report, she noted.

If the state doesn’t fund adequacy supplements, basic education, special education, and more at a “sufficient level,” Williams said, “we will be back in court but with different school districts.”

Spotlight PA’s Katie Meyer contributed to this report.