HOUSE BILL
WOULD CAP GROWTH IN SKY-HIGH ADMINISTRATIVE SPENDING AT ILLINOIS SCHOOLS
Illinois Policy Institute/
Vincent Caruso
Illinois' spending on administrative costs
is among the highest in the nation, sapping scarce dollars from the
classroom. But a new bill would slow the growth in these expenses and
align them with taxpayers' ability to pay.
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Classrooms and taxpayers alike might stand to benefit from a
recent bill filed in the General Assembly.
House Bill 4789, filed Feb. 13 by state Rep. Peter Breen, R-Lombard, would
impose a cap on the growth of funds that can be allocated toward administrative
costs in Illinois’ public school districts.
Illinois currently spends more than double the national average on education in
per-student terms, and more than any other state in the Midwest. However, not
all of these funds reach the classroom. School districts also provide for
administrators’ salaries and perks, costs that too frequently disregard
taxpayers’ inability to pay for them.
HB 4789 would place a cap on the rate at which administrative costs are
permitted to grow each year: the lesser of 5 percent or the growth in the
Consumer Price Index.
 The rise of administrative costs has consumed a growing portion of school
district budgets, diverting resources away from the classroom. Based on 2014
data, the Metropolitan Planning Council, or MPC, produced a report in 2017 that
found Illinois school districts collectively spend $518 per student on “general
administration” – second-highest in the nation and more than double the national
average.
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The MPC study found that by bringing down
administrative costs to a level closer to that of the national
average, district budgets could better meet the education funding
needs of students.
Ultimately, spending devoted to school district
administration must be reduced. Rising administrative costs crowd
students out of the budget – and bill taxpayers for the trouble. A
great place to start would be consolidating Illinois’ overabundance
of school districts, each with their own costly and often
overlapping bureaucracies.
HB 4789 presents a welcome step in the right direction. Capping the
growth of administrative spending will offer officials an
opportunity to spend public funds more effectively. Further, it
signals seriousness on the part of some lawmakers in addressing one
factor behind Illinoisans’ crushing property tax burdens.
Lawmakers would be wise to allow HB 4789 to graduate to the
governor’s desk.
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