[Vision2020] Idaho May Miss Out on School Aid

Art Deco deco at moscow.com
Sat Aug 14 11:43:30 PDT 2010


This is like showing up at the emergency room with filthy underwear.

w.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Hansen 
  To: Moscow Vision 2020 
  Sent: Saturday, August 14, 2010 7:02 AM
  Subject: [Vision2020] Idaho May Miss Out on School Aid


  Courtesy of today's (August 14, 2010) Spokesman-Review.

   

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  Idaho may miss out on school aid

  State funding level may be too low to qualify

  Jessie L. Bonner, Associated Press  

   

  BOISE - Public schools chief Tom Luna says there are concerns Idaho may not qualify for education money under a new federal law aimed at helping states spare thousands of teaching jobs.

   

  The emergency spending bill signed into law Tuesday will provide $10 billion to help states cover funding for an estimated 160,000 jobs in K-12 public schools and another $16 billion for Medicaid costs.

   

  Idaho is expected to receive about $51 million to hire, rehire and retain teachers.

   

  Luna said more than a few states have questions about the law, which requires states to show they've maintained a certain level of funding at both the public school and higher education level. "There are concerns that we may not qualify under the rules," he said.

   

  Sen. John Goedde, a Republican who chairs the Senate Education Committee, said it appears Idaho will have to boost funding for higher education to become eligible for the new public schools money.

   

  The budget for Idaho's four-year public universities this fiscal year includes about $32.1 million less in total funding and further slashes the state share of costs for higher education.

   

  The state's general fund portion dropped about 14.1 percent and, combined with previous losses, means Idaho will be spending about $67.6 million less in tax revenue on higher education than it did two years ago.

   

  Idaho, to bolster the higher education budget, would either have to draw from public education reserves or raid the so-called Millennium Fund, which holds the state's share of a big 1998 settlement with tobacco companies, Goedde said.

   

  A withdrawal from either fund would likely need approval from the Idaho Legislature, making it unclear whether the governor would have to call a special session, Goedde said.

   

  Gov. Butch Otter's spokesman, Jon Hanian, said Friday the governor was still assessing the new law and what it means for Idaho, reiterating criticisms that there was a lack of clear guidance from the federal government.

   

  States must apply to the federal education department within 30 days of when the law took effect, and funds must be awarded to states within 45 days of enactment. 

   

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  Seeya at Farmers Market, Moscow.

   

  Tom Hansen

  Moscow, Idaho

   

  "Corporations are an oppressed minority forced to move headquarters from state to state in search of friendlier tax codes--sometimes being forced to live just off our shores in tiny mailboxes." 

   

  - John Oliver, The Daily Show

   



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