Akron
Beacon Journal...
Gone
studyin’
June 20,
2012
The Ohio
House Finance Committee spent the spring brushing up on the basics of
the
school funding system. The House plans several regional hearings on the
issue
during the summer break. When it comes to funding public education, it
is hard
to say Ohio legislators have not done due diligence in one aspect:
studying the
issue.
Since the
Ohio Supreme Court first ruled the state’s funding system
unconstitutional, a
succession of governors and legislators have promised earnestly to come
up with
a plan that would fix funding inequities and ease the burden on
property owners
— just as soon as they have heard what the experts and assorted
stakeholders
say.
It isn’t
for lack of studies that school districts across Ohio still are short
on funds
and face frequent ballot wars with local taxpayers. Soon after the 1997
DeRolph
decision, Gov. George Voinovich and legislators offered the Augenblick
“successful schools” model, which used spending levels in academically
successful districts as the basis for adequate funding.
Bob Taft’s
team favored a “building blocks” model, paying attention to key
elements of
education. On his turn, Ted Strickland staged statewide listening tours
and
presented the “evidence-based” model. John Kasich promptly scrapped it
for a
“bridge formula” on taking office, promising his own comprehensive
model. “When
we get it right, we’ll let you know,” the director of the Governor’s
Office of
21st Century Education said last summer.
Ohioans and
their school districts must wonder how long the Statehouse will plow
the same
ground and come up short of a durable solution.
Read this
and other articles at the Akron Beacon Journal
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