Current:Home > MarketsMississippi legislators are moving toward a showdown on how to pay for public schools -GrowthProspect
Mississippi legislators are moving toward a showdown on how to pay for public schools
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:01:13
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A conflict is building among Mississippi legislative leaders over whether to tweak an education funding formula or ditch it and set a new one.
The state Senate voted Thursday, without opposition, to make a few changes to the Mississippi Adequate Education Program, which has been in law since 1997. The action came a day after the House voted to abandon MAEP and replace it with a new formula.
MAEP is designed to give school districts enough money to meet midlevel academic standards. It is based on several factors, including costs of instruction, administration, operation and maintenance of schools, and other support services.
“It also allows superintendents of districts to know roughly what they are getting every year because we have an objective formula,” Senate Education Committee Chairman Dennis DeBar, R-Leakesville, said Thursday.
The Senate proposal could require local communities to pay a slightly larger percentage of overall school funding. It also specifies that if a student transfers from a charter school to another public school, the charter school would not keep all of the public money that it received for that student.
Legislators have fully funded MAEP only two years, and House leaders say that is an indication that a new formula is needed.
The formula proposed by the House is called INSPIRE — Investing in the Needs of Students to Prioritize, Impact and Reform Education. It would be based on a per-student cost determined by a group of 13 people, including eight superintendents of school districts.
House Education Committee Vice Chairman Kent McCarty, a Republican from Hattiesburg, said INSPIRE would be more equitable because school districts would receive extra money if they have large concentrations of poverty or if they enroll large numbers of students who have special needs or are learning English as a second language.
The House voted 95-13 to pass the INSPIRE plan and send it to the Senate for more work. The Senate bill moves to the House. The two chambers must resolve their differences, or abandon any proposed changes, before the legislative session ends in early May.
The House Democratic leader, Rep. Robert Johnson of Natchez, said Thursday that INSPIRE is based on statistics from an unknown source. He suggested conservative groups hostile to public education could be behind the legislation.
“All they’ve tried to do is destroy public education,” Johnson said of the groups. “They love it, they think it’s great. And all they’ve ever been for is charter schools, vouchers and public money to private schools. … Pie in the sky. Fake numbers.”
House Education Committee Chairman Rep. Rob Roberson, a Republican from Starkville, said a “communication breakdown” occurred Wednesday over information provided to Johnson during Wednesday’s House debate. Roberson said financial figures came from lawmakers who sought advice from a range of groups.
During a news conference Thursday, House Speaker Jason White said the House Republican majority is not prepared to relent on its view that lawmakers should eliminate MAEP.
“It is time to once and for all acknowledge that the MAEP formula is a thing of the past,” White said. “Very few understand it, and it certainly has not been followed.”
veryGood! (77)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Secondary tickets surge for F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix, but a sellout appears unlikely
- Last of 4 men who escaped from a Georgia jail last month is caught
- Hungary’s Orbán says Ukraine is ‘light years away’ from joining the EU
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Residents of Iceland town evacuated over volcano told it will be months before they can go home
- Is China Emitting a Climate Super Pollutant in Violation of an International Environmental Agreement?
- House Republicans to release most of Jan. 6 footage
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Thanksgiving recipes to help you save money on food costs and still impress your guests
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Kaitlin Armstrong, convicted of killing pro cyclist Mo Wilson, sentenced to 90 years in prison
- Ward leads Washington State to 56-14 romp over Colorado; Sanders exits with injury
- Political violence threatens to intensify as the 2024 campaign heats up, experts on extremism warn
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- French Holocaust survivors are recoiling at new antisemitism, and activists are pleading for peace
- From soccer infamy to Xbox 'therapy,' what's real and what's not in 'Next Goal Wins'
- COMIC: What it's like living with an underactive thyroid
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Nordstrom's Black Friday Deals: Save Up To 70% On Clothes, Accessories, Decor & More
Bangladesh’s top court upholds decision barring largest Islamist party from elections
The Truth About Those Slaps and More: 15 Secrets About Monster-In-Law
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Roadside bomb kills 3 people in Pakistan’s insurgency-hit Baluchistan province
Judge rejects Trump motion for mistrial in New York fraud case
Check Out All These Bachelor Nation Couples Who Recently Got Married