Illinois governor says schools will open
despite funding fight
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[July 15, 2017]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Illinois
Governor Bruce Rauner said on Friday that the state's 855 public school
districts will open next month despite a disagreement over legislation
that could lead to a halt in state education funding.
"We're going to make sure schools get open," the Republican governor
told reporters as he reiterated his opposition to a bill passed by the
Democratic-controlled legislature in May that he called "fundamentally
unfair" to schools and taxpayers.
The bill establishes an evidence-based model that ties public school
funding to "best practices" aimed at enhancing student achievement. It
also allocates about $300 million more to the Chicago Public Schools
(CPS) for state aid and pensions.
Meanwhile, the $36 billion fiscal 2018 budget the Illinois General
Assembly enacted last week over Rauner's veto prohibits the flow of
state money to schools in the absence of an evidence-based funding
model, raising concerns over whether the state will make a looming
August payment to the school districts.
The governor, a long-time critic of the financially struggling CPS, said
the bill benefits "one school district" at the expense of others.
"We need to get a fair school funding formula that's fair to everyone,"
Rauner said, adding that the bill has not yet been sent to him by the
legislature.
Votes in both the House and Senate for the measure's passage in May fell
short of the three-fifths threshold required to override a veto.
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Illinois Gov-elect
Bruce Rauner speaks to the media after a meeting with U.S. President
Barack Obama and other Governor-elects from seven U.S. states at the
White House in Washington December 5, 2014. REUTERS/Larry
Downing/File Photo
Moody's Investors Service said on Friday that a delay in the first
fiscal 2018 state payment due schools in August would pressure
districts, including junk-rated CPS, forcing some to tap reserves or
borrow for operations.
"School districts with relatively low property tax wealth or high
poverty face the greatest risk from a disruption in state funding
because of their material dependence on state aid," Moody's said in
a report.
In fiscal 2016, some 119 school districts relied on state money for
50 percent to as much as 71.5 percent of their budgets, according to
Illinois State Board of Education data.
An Illinois Association of School Boards official has said that
about a dozen districts may not be able to start classes next month
if state funding is delayed.
(Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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