Bad school budget math: More students, less money
By admin at 11 March, 2010, 1:30 pm
The Senate committee crafting the budget for K-12 public and charter schools on Thursday received grim data on projected enrollment and tax revenues that, combined, promise to make their job more challenging. In a 180-degree turn from last spring when education officials were projecting a 10,000-student decline in student enrollment, state officials now say that more than 19,000 additional students are likely to show up in K-12 classrooms come this fall. "Last year we were talking about a 10,000 loss, and now we're talking about a 19,000 increase," said committee chairman Stephen Wise, R-Jacksonville. "That's a big change. And that becomes problematic. we've got more students, we've got Haitians coming in and we weren't counting on them." Yet money remains tight, with local school tax revenues (RLE) down by $680 million. Senate President Jeff Atwater earlier this week gave Wise's committee more than $8 billion to work with. The proposal discussed in Wise's committee Thursday would bring per-student spending
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Bad school budget math: More students, less money
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