logo
Iowa Senate passes 2% per-pupil increase for K-12 public schools

Iowa Senate passes 2% per-pupil increase for K-12 public schools

Yahoo07-04-2025
Sen. Lynn Evans, R-Aurelia, spoke April 7, 2025 as the floor manager for the legislation setting Iowa's State Supplemental Aid rate for the upcoming school year. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch)
Iowa K-12 public schools would receive a 2% increase in state per-pupil funding next year under legislation the Iowa Senate approved Monday on 32-15 vote.
Senate File 167 sets the State Supplemental Aid (SSA) rate for the upcoming fiscal year. SSA is the growth rate for public K-12 school funding, allocated to schools on a per-pupil basis.
The Senate, and Gov. Kim Reynolds, had put forward the 2% SSA rate. But in February, the Iowa House returned the legislation to the Senate after increasing the SSA rate from 2% to 2.25%. The House amendment also added other funding components like a $10 increase to the state cost per pupil, changes to transportation equity aid payment and weighting for school districts with shared operational costs, as well as a one-time allocation of $22.6 million to help school districts with rising costs and the impacts of inflation.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Since the House vote Feb. 18, the measure did not seen public discussion again before Monday, April 7. Lawmakers had already failed to meet their self-imposed deadline to pass school funding within 30 days of the governor's budget release, in addition to failing to pass the measure before school districts' budget proposals were due in early March. However, there are still a few weeks before the school districts' final budgets must be submitted to the state by April 30.
House Speaker Pat Grassley told reporters in several news conferences that House Republicans were committed to providing some additional funding supports for Iowa K-12 schools, components that were part of the hold-up in passing this year's SSA rate.
'We understand that we may not get all of those things that we include in our bill, but we'd be hopeful that there'd be at least some consideration,' Grassley told reporters in late March. 'Whether it's operational sharing, whether it's some one-time, inflationary factors — we continue to be hopeful that at some point in time enough Iowans engaging in this conversation will at least put some of those things on the table.'
The gridlock ended Monday as Senate Republicans returned with an amendment that set the SSA rate at 2%, but included some components of the House amendment. The $22.6 million appropriation was removed, and the proposed raise to the state cost per pupil was lowered from $10 to $5. While the House language gave a standing unlimited appropriation for transportation equity aid payment beginning in fiscal year 2026 to make sure the statewide adjusted transportation cost per pupil was not lower than the statewide average cost, the Senate language set a 5% rate for payments to the transportation equity fund per pupil.
Sen. Lynn Evans, R-Aurelia, said that with the amendment, the spending package represents a $238.1 million increase for K-12 schools compared to FY 2025. Of that increase, $126.8 million will go to public schools, $96.8 million to the state's Education Savings Account (ESA) program, providing public funds for private school costs, and $14.5 million for charter schools.
Evans said that the proposal provides 'responsible and sustainable funding for local school districts.' He emphasized that Republicans have steadily increased school funding in Iowa, and that K-12 spending will make up 44.7% of the state's budget in FY 2026 at $4.2 billion.
'This bill makes a promise to local school districts that can be kept,' Evans said.
During debate on the SSA rate, Democrats have repeatedly called for their GOP colleagues — who control both chambers — to set a higher rate in 2025. The minority party argued that the 2% rate will put more than 150 Iowa school districts on the budget guarantee process, which will trigger property tax increases to meet funding obligations that the SSA rate does not cover.
Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott, D-West Des Moines, said Republicans' SSA proposal was 'shameful' and that the proposal will result in either higher property taxes or school staff cuts.
'This is really personal to me,' Trone Garriott said. 'My kids go to one of these schools where we are going to see cuts. My school is on this list. Property taxes are going to have to go up just to scrape by. Meanwhile, parents like me get to see up close and personal, the people who are going to lose their job, the great teachers that are going to go elsewhere, the programs that are getting cut, the class sizes that are getting larger, the opportunities that are getting missed because this body and the state Legislature won't invest in the majority of Iowa's kids through our public schools.'
Sen. Janet Petersen, D-Des Moines, criticized the measure as a part of legislative Republicans' and Reynolds' larger budgeting strategy which she said prioritizes private school students through the Education Savings Account (ESA) program over the majority of Iowa students who attend public K-12 schools. The ESA program, which provides students with public funds equal to the SSA per-pupil funding rate for private school tuition and associated costs, will be open to all Iowa students with no family income limits beginning in the 2025-2026 school year.
Petersen said the governor's five-year projections for the state's finances show repeated dips into the state's Taxpayer Relief Fund that she said directly align with spending on the ESA program, championed by Reynolds in 2023.
'When you look at this budget … 92% of our school-age children that go to public schools are going to get an measly increase, because you have invested millions and millions of dollars for very small number of families to receive private school vouchers and corporate tax cuts,' Petersen said. 'There is still time to address that, where we could put millions more into our public school districts instead of handing them over to wealthy families who are already sending their kids to private schools, I would encourage a no vote on this legislation. It is not enough.'
Evans said the amended bill is an increased investment in Iowa's K-12 system, and also represents a focus on keeping educational funding with K-12 students rather than with school districts.
'We believe it's important to be honest with our school districts about the state's finances and not overpromise,' Evans said. 'This bill continues our focus of funding students over systems. This proposal continues to demonstrate our commitment to education, dedicated funding to help students in the educational setting that is best for them and will prepare them for future success.'
The legislation returns to the Iowa House.
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Americans agree with Trump on crime — and smart Dems like Chris Matthews know it
Americans agree with Trump on crime — and smart Dems like Chris Matthews know it

The Hill

time26 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Americans agree with Trump on crime — and smart Dems like Chris Matthews know it

All week, Lindsey Granger and I have been discussing debating President Trump's approach to tackling the crime problem in Washington, D.C. Our debate mirrors a national debate taking place — Republicans are applauding Trump's decision to send in federal troops and impose order on the crime-plagued national capital, whereas Democrats and mainstream media progressives are disdaining this action, quibbling over the statistics, or even defiantly insisting that everything is perfectly fine in D.C. A characteristic response came from House Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who said he feels totally safe at all times walking around the city. Right. Suuuuuure. Now look, as I said yesterday, it's perfectly fine to disagree with Trump's particular strategy for combatting crime: i.e., deploying the National Guard. If your perspective is that D.C. needs more local police detectives, competent prosecutors, and a working crime lab more than we need federal troops, well — I agree with you! If your perspective is, everything is fine, nothing to see here, you're either lying or you haven't spent much time in my neck of the woods. And here's the thing: Local Democrats, like Mayor Muriel Bowser, already know this. They also know something that progressive elites apparently don't: the American people agree with Donald Trump on crime. In fact, they trust Republicans so much more than Democrats on this issue, it's not even funny. Here's CNN pollster Harry Enten breaking down the numbers. Trump is massively ahead on this issue. It's a big winner for him. And here's more: Smart Democrats know it. I was not surprised to see Chris Matthews, the liberal commentator who is by the far the most plugged into what ordinary Americans think, making this point on MSNBC: 'You can't keep saying violent crime is down but the murder rate's up — to the average person the murder rate is about life and death. You don't brag about a rising murder rate. … The Democrats are falling in the trap of defending what's indefensible.' It's a trap! I always love a Star Wars reference. I'm not in the habit of giving advice to Democrats, but it seems to me that avoiding the trap is pretty easy. Just say the following: Crime levels in cities like D.C. are unacceptable. It's true that things are better than they were during the pandemic, but Americans deserve a baseline of safer cities. To that end, we advocate X, Y, Z policies to make cities safer. In D.C., that means hiring and training more homicide detectives, deploying more authority figures to patrol dangerous neighborhoods, deterring teenage gangs from forming, and giving the criminal justice system whatever it needs to prosecute criminals and lock them up. These commonsense policies are popular with the American people. Are Democrats willing to listen?

Rove warns Trump against overpromising on economy
Rove warns Trump against overpromising on economy

The Hill

time26 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Rove warns Trump against overpromising on economy

Republican strategist Karl Rove warned President Trump about making too many promises to the American people about the quality of the economy, predicting failure to deliver could cost Republicans in the midterm elections. 'On economics, Team Trump is making the same mistake as the last administration,' Rove wrote in a recent op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. 'President Biden and big-name Democrats went across America proclaiming 'Bidenomics is working.' People felt the opposite.' The danger for Trump, the cable news pundit argued, is 'he's addicted to superlatives and self-congratulations and prone to declaring premature success.' 'While Republicans generally agree with the president's depiction of things, independents don't,' Rove, who previously served as a top aide to former President George W. Bush, continued. 'They are deeply concerned about tariffs, debt and prices.' He also wrote that Trump and his allies 'would be smarter to underpromise and overdeliver, especially since righting the economy will take time.' 'It's self-destructive for Republicans to make over-the-top claims,' the pundit wrote. 'How voters feel about their own circumstances will hugely influence next year's outcome. Seeming out of touch could make the midterms even harder.' The analysis comes as the president seeks to reassure the public about the economy following the latest dismal jobs report and uncertainty around his trade agenda following the latest rollout of tariffs on foreign trading partners.

Cornyn shows signs of life in Texas Senate poll
Cornyn shows signs of life in Texas Senate poll

Axios

time26 minutes ago

  • Axios

Cornyn shows signs of life in Texas Senate poll

Sen. John Cornyn has finally climbed within the margin of error against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in new, independent polling of Texas GOP primary voters. Why it matters: It's the first poll since outside groups spent millions of dollars on pro-Cornyn advertising, and since news broke of Paxton's divorce. Cornyn's primary chances have otherwise looked bleak, despite Senate GOP leaders warning the White House and major donors that a Paxton nomination could risk the seat. Zoom in: The Emerson poll released Friday has Cornyn with 30% of Texas GOP primary voters, and Paxton with 29%. The margin of error is +/- 4.4%. The same poll showed 37% of voters still undecided. It's a major improvement for Cornyn, after polls earlier this summer showed him down by double digits to Paxton. The Emerson poll has Cornyn beating Democrat Colin Allred in a hypothetical match up by seven percentage points, with Paxton winning over Allred by five percentage points. Zoom out: Groups affiliated with the Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC that's linked to Senate Republican leadership, have spent more than $4 million over the past month to boost Cornyn with Texas voters, according to AdImpact. Another pro-Cornyn super PAC spent an additional $3+ million over the same time frame. SLF has been warning donors that it could cost tens of millions of dollars to help Cornyn win the primary — though they add it could save them from having to spend hundreds of millions to help Paxton keep the seat from Democrats, as Punchbowl News first reported. Methodology: The Emerson poll was conducted August 11-12 with a sample of 1,000 Texas registered voters. The GOP subsample was 491 and the subsample credibility interval (similar to a margin of error) was +/-4.4%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store