Educators defend planned leadership academy to train principals, county school leaders
State Superintendent of Schools Carey Wright, center, testifies Thursday with Krishna Tallur, left, the deputy superintendent for finance and operations, and Donna Gunning, assistant superintendent for finance. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters)
Education officials defended a planned 'leadership academy' for would-be principals and county board leaders, telling lawmakers Thursday that the program is needed to grow a 'pipeline of highly trained and effective school leaders.'
The comments came during a hearing before House Appropriations subcommittee which was considering a legislative analyst's recommendation that funding for the academy be cut in half next year, from the $6.3 million in Gov. Wes Moore's proposed budget to $3 million.
Department of Education officials said they 'respectfully disagree.'
'The academy will focus on developing school leaders, focusing on school leaders of color and those that serve high-poverty schools and low-performing schools,' said Krishna Tallur, deputy state superintendent for the department's Office of Finance and Operations, in testimony to Appropriations Subcommittee on Education and Economic Development.
The cuts to the academy were among several recommended for the budget of the Education Department's headquarters, including a proposed reduction to the proposed Concentration of Poverty Grant program, from the budgeted $3 million down to $2 million next year. That is another cut with which Education Department witnesses said they 'respectfully disagree.'
Both the poverty grants and the leadership academy are called for in the Blueprint for Maryland's Future, the sweeping 10-year education reform plan that has emerged as an early battleground in the state's fight to close a projected $3 billion gap in the $67 billion state budget for fiscal 2026.
Teachers' union lobbies lawmakers to fully fund Blueprint, among legislative priorities
The Blueprint, and the governor's budget, call for the creation of a leadership academy next year under the Department of Education at a cost of $6.3 million.
'That's something we don't have in the state at all,' State Superintendent of Schools Carey Wright said in an interview after testifying to the subcommittee. 'The idea behind our leadership academy was [to look] for aspiring leaders … across the state and provide the training to help them be ready on day one.'
But legislative analysts noted that the state has already started a training program this year for state and local superintendents, at a cost of $3 million. With that money being spent beginning in January 2025, the analysts recommended 'level funding' the academy next year at the same level.
The academy and school system training initiatives are components of a School Leadership Training Program proposed by Moore as part of his 'Excellence in Maryland Public Schools Act,' submitted last month as Senate Bill 429 and House Bill 504.
The Senate version is scheduled for a joint bill hearing Feb. 19 before the Budget and Taxation and the Education, Energy and the Environment committees. The House bill will be heard jointly by the Appropriations and the Ways and Means committees, but a hearing date had not been set as of Thursday.
Moore's bills have so far drawn more attention for what they would not fund, than for what they would. The governor's education plan calls for a four-year delay in funding for teacher 'collaborative time' — out-of-classroom time when teachers plan, get training, work individually with students and more. But that will require the hiring of more teachers to free up classroom time.
The Blueprint currently calls for collaborative time funding to begin next year, at a cost of $163 per student, growing annually until it reaches $1,527 per pupil by fiscal 2033. Moore's bill would maintain the funding levels, but delay them for four years, but push the starting date back to fiscal 2030, with the program running through fiscal 2037.
The pause, as administration officials call it, is due to a statewide teacher shortage.
While teachers and some state lawmakers have come out against the delay in collaborative time funding, Wright and Isiah 'Ike' Leggett, the chair of the Accountability and Implementation Board overseeing implementation of the Blueprint, both say a pause makes sense. The AIB voted last month to recommend a pause in collaborative time.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Leggett noted Thursday that at least 12,000 more teachers would be needed to implement collaborative time next school year, a number that doesn't include the 6,000 teachers who are currently working with a conditional license.
'That's a huge challenge. This plan cannot be implemented as intended given those numbers,' Leggett said to the committee. 'There is no plan that I have seen that will change these numbers overnight.'
But education department officials did disagree with one cut that is in both the governor's plan and the legislative analyst's recommendation — the reduction in funding for the Concentration of Poverty Grant program. The state has more than 700 schools designated as community schools, which would receive concentration in poverty grants, based on the number of students who receive free and reduced-price meals.
The analyst's report would cut $1 million from the budget to administer the grants while the governor's budget would freeze funding for community schools, a cut the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland doesn't support.
The education department's overall budget is proposed to increase by nearly $15 million, or 4%, to $388 million from this current fiscal year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Minnesota budget deal cuts health care for adults who entered the US illegally
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Adults living in the U.S. illegally will be excluded from a state-run health care program under an overall budget deal that the closely divided Minnesota Legislature convened to pass in a special session Monday. Repealing a 2023 state law that made those immigrants eligible for the MinnesotaCare program for the working poor was a priority for Republicans in the negotiations that produced the budget agreement. The Legislature is split 101-100, with the House tied and Democrats holding just a one-seat majority in the Senate, and the health care compromise was a bitter pill for Democrats to accept. The change is expected to affect about 17,000 residents. Democratic Gov. Tim Walz, who insisted on maintaining eligibility for children who aren't in the country legally, has promised to sign all 14 bills scheduled for action in the special session, to complete a $66 billion, two-year budget that will take effect July 1. After an emotional near four-hour debate, the House voted 68-65 to send the bill to the Senate, where Majority Leader Erin Murphy, of St. Paul, had already said she would supply the necessary Democratic vote to pass it. Under the agreement, the top House Democratic leader, Melissa Hortman, of Brooklyn Park, was the only member of her caucus to vote yes. 'This is 100% about the GOP campaign against immigrants,' said House Democratic Floor Leader Jamie Long, of Minneapolis, who voted no. 'From Trump's renewed travel ban announced this week, to his effort to expel those with protected status, to harassing students here to study, to disproportionate military and law enforcement responses that we've seen from Minneapolis to L.A., this all comes back to attacking immigrants and the name of dividing us.' But GOP Rep. Jeff Backer, of Browns Valley, the lead author of the bill, said taxpayers shouldn't have to subsidize health care for people who aren't in the country legally. Backer said California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, has proposed freezing enrollment for immigrants without legal status in a similar state-funded program and that Illinois' Democratic governor, JB Pritzker, has proposed cutting a similar program. He said residents can still buy health insurance on the private market regardless of their immigration status. 'This is about being fiscally responsible,' Backer said. Enrollment by people who entered the country illegally in MinnesotaCare has run triple the initial projections, which Republicans said could have pushed the costs over $600 million over the next four years. Critics said the change won't save any money because those affected will forego preventive care and need much more expensive care later. 'People don't suddenly stop getting sick when they don't have insurance, but they do put off seeking care until a condition gets bad enough to require a visit to the emergency room, increasing overall health care costs for everyone,' Bernie Burnham, president of the Minnesota AFL-CIO, told reporters at a news conference organized by the critics. Walz and legislative leaders agreed on the broad framework for the budget over four weeks ago, contrasting the bipartisan cooperation that produced it with the deep divisions at the federal level in Washington. But with the tie in the House and the razor-thin Senate Democratic majority, few major policy initiatives got off the ground before the regular session ended May 19. Leaders announced Friday that the details were settled and that they had enough votes to pass everything in the budget package.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Rep. Julie von Haefen on why both competing state budget proposals at the legislature come up short
State Rep. Julie von Haefen (Photo: NCGA) Well summer is here and with its arrival, the end of the state fiscal year will soon follow, and that means North Carolina legislators are under some pressure to pass a new state budget. Right now, however, despite complete Republican control of both the Senate and House, the two chambers remain far apart and that could portend a long hot summer at the Legislative Building. So, what's at the heart of the dispute and where do both budget proposals come up short? Recently to get a handle on these issues, how lawmakers got in this fix, and why the state might be better off if they listened for a change to some different voices, Newsline's Rob Schofield caught up with a Wake County lawmaker who's spent the better part of seven years trying to get her colleagues to open their minds to some new ideas, State Rep. Julie von Haefen. Click here to listen to the full interview with Rep. Julie von Haefen.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Stephen Miller hits Rand Paul over LA unrest
A top aide to President Trump took aim at Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) on Monday over Paul's objections to the president's agenda-setting tax and spending measure while protests are underway in Los Angeles over the administration's immigration crackdown. 'While ICE officers are battling violent mobs in Los Angeles, Rand Paul is trying to cut funding for deportations and border security,' White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller wrote in a post on the social platform X. Paul has emerged as one of the most vocal Republican opponents of Trump's megabill because of its price tag and increase to the federal debt. Paul and other GOP senators vowed to vote against the bill after narrowly passed the Republican-controlled House last month unless additional spending cuts are made. 'Congress is like drunken teenagers, they're terrible with money,' Paul said during an appearance this weekend on Fox News's 'Sunday Morning Futures.' 'This is literally out of control.' He reiterated his position on X after Miller's rebuke Monday. 'Don't fall for the Swamp's version of reality, where they claim we either borrow against our future to secure our border now, or we have wide-open borders,' he wrote. 'We can have BOTH border security AND fiscal responsibility; $75 billion is more than enough to accomplish both.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.