logo
In Indiana, a Fight Over Splitting Money Between Districts and Charter Schools

In Indiana, a Fight Over Splitting Money Between Districts and Charter Schools

Yahoo20-02-2025

Indiana's charter school advocates' push to shift property tax money and other resources from districts to charters has sparked heated debate — with charters saying their students are shortchanged and school districts warning they could be forced to close schools.
The battle is playing out around three bills before the Indiana state legislature as it grapples with the rapid growth of charter schools, especially in Indianapolis.
More than 60% of Indianapolis public school students attend charter schools, making the city a national leader to school choice advocates.
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter
One of the three bills would have eliminated the Indianapolis Public Schools and four other districts, but failed to pass out of committee earlier this week. Instead, the bill that has gained the most traction would shift $80 million in local annual property taxes from school districts to charters. The move is aimed at closing a funding gap between district and charter schools which one study estimates at $8,000 per student in Indianapolis, with districts spending $18,500 and charters $10,600.
The state Senate passed that bill Wednesday after agreeing to delay some of the tax sharing until 2028. It now heads to the Indiana House.
State Sen. Linda Rogers, author of the bill, said local property taxes should 'follow the student' to any school they choose, as state aid already does.
'Local funding today… remains with the district, even though the student living in the district may not be receiving their education there,' Rogers said in a committee hearing on the bill last week that drew impassioned testimony from more than 50 supporters and critics.
'If you have thousands of students that you're getting paid for, that you're not educating, is that fair?' she added.
Kim Reier, vice president of strategy for the Indiana Charter School Alliance, said the state must stop 'prioritizing institutions' like districts instead of individual schools.
'Families who choose charter schools still pay the same property taxes, yet those dollars remain locked in the districts that they no longer attend,' Reier testified.
But at the same hearing, Indianapolis Public Schools officials said the bill would devastate the district. Superintendent Aleesia Johnson said the bill would force the district to close 20 schools, cut busing for students and likely hurt its partnership with some charter schools known as Innovation Schools.
She also joined critics of charter school growth who say it has led to an 'oversaturation' of schools in the city for the number of students.
'Because there are currently no limitations of the number of new charter schools that can be opened in our boundary, the dollars will continue to be more and more splintered until every school gets something, but no school gets enough,' Johnson said.
The most extreme of the three bills — one that would wipe out the Indianapolis school district and turn all 50 of its schools over to charters — did not win enough support to even have a hearing. But it both loomed as a threat in case no funding changes pass and as a rallying cry for the district, which called on residents to fight to save its schools.
A third bill aimed at providing charters and private schools with two crucial needs — school buildings and busing — also awaits a hearing in the House Education Committee. That bill would appoint facilities and student transportation boards in Indianapolis and four other cities to take control of all district, charter and private school buses and buildings. Boards would include two appointees by the mayor, one by city council and two by state house and senate leaders.
The boards would then award buildings to school operators, district, charter and private, deemed most promising and coordinate busing for students of all schools in the city.
The bill calls for those panels to launch in the 2026-27 school year and take control of buildings over time, but legislators are considering delaying them to study how they would work.
Rogers' tax sharing bill drew support from charter schools, including the KIPP Indy and Adelante charter school operators, who run so-called Innovation Schools that have support of the school district and each have agreements to use varying combinations of school district buildings, buses and internet service.
Other prominent charter school operators, like the Paramount Schools of Excellence, which has four schools in Indianapolis, an online school and schools in Lafayette and South Bend, are not taking any public position.
Leaders of the Mind Trust and Stand For Children, nonprofit advocates of school choice, also testified in support of Rogers' bill, praising it for trying to close a funding gap they say is unfair to charter students.
Both organizations, along with Rise Indy, another nonprofit, have been criticized in recent weeks by some Indianapolis Public Schools board members and residents for promoting charter schools using money from outside the state.
Mind Trust CEO Brandon Brown said he is willing to 'be a punching bag' if it leads to changes that help charter schools and students.
'I am happy to take any slings and arrows if it means that we're going to be one step closer to a system that treats all kids fairly and with the respect that they deserve,' he said.
But teachers opposed the bill, as did parents of children in Indianapolis Public Schools.
Sally Sloan, executive director of the American Federation of Teachers of Indiana, said sharing tax money with charters would make school districts need more money and seek higher property taxes from voters.
And parents said they voted for property taxes to help the school district, not other schools.
'I just don't think it should be the policy of the state to tell people how to spend their property tax revenue,' said Chris Kozak, parent of a student at the district's Eleanor Skillen Montessori elementary school. 'We voted for an additional levy for the Indianapolis public schools. I don't think I would have voted for it if I had known this was going to come.'
Others called it 'taxation without representation' since charter schools don't have elected school boards.
'I think it's another handout, an unearned handout, to charter schools, of which one in three will fail, most likely due to mismanagement, not because of outcomes,' said Mark Latta, father of a student at the Theodore Potter Spanish language elementary school. 'Schools without public oversight are not public schools.'
Disclosure: The Mind Trust provides financial support to The 74.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mexican president condemns L.A. violence, calls on Mexicans to act peacefully
Mexican president condemns L.A. violence, calls on Mexicans to act peacefully

Los Angeles Times

time26 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Mexican president condemns L.A. violence, calls on Mexicans to act peacefully

MEXICO CITY — As images of chaos in Los Angeles dominated Mexican media, President Claudia Sheinbaum condemned the weekend clashes but refrained from any direct denunciation of Washington's hard-line immigration tactics — while urging Mexican citizens in California to eschew violence. Sheinbaum, who has won widespread acclaim for her deft handling of incendiary pronouncements by President Trump on tariffs, drug smuggling and other issues, again sought to walk a fine line: She called on U.S. authorities to 'respect the human dignity' of 'hard-working' and 'honest' Mexican immigrants, while denouncing unlawful acts. 'Burning patrol cars seems more like an act of provocation than one of resistance,' Sheinbaum said Monday. A day earlier, the president had been more pointed in her critique of U.S. immigration roundups, which have drawn widespread outrage here. 'The immigration phenomenon cannot be dealt with through violence or raids,' Sheinbaum told a crowd Sunday at a hospital ribbon-cutting outside the capital. News reports and social media accounts in Mexico have widely circulated images of U.S. agents in tactical gear facing off against protesters baring Mexican flags. 'We call on the government of the United States to avoid any act of repression and rectify its unjust and arbitrary policy against millions of immigrants,' Gerardo Fernández Noroña, president of the Mexican Senate and a member of Sheinbaum's ruling Morena bloc, told reporters. On the streets in Mexico City, many Mexicans focused not on the protests, but recent raids by immigration agents in Southern California. They assailed what they viewed as unwarranted attacks against compatriots and relatives. 'I have some cousins living in California and they're very worried and frightened about the raids,' said Alejandra Morales, 47, who works in a rehab clinic in the capital. 'They are good people who only seek a better life for their kids. Trump may ruin their lives.' Said Sofía González, 32, a veterinarian: 'I think President Sheinbaum should be very forceful in her protests against Trump. We've had enough of Trump doing crazy things and maltreating Mexicans.' In her comments, Sheinbaum expressed appreciation to Los Angeles for having provided a home for generations of Mexican immigrants and their families. Mexican citizens are the largest immigrant group in the United States, numbering more than 11 million, according to various estimates. Mexican-born immigrants are widely dispersed across the country, though Los Angeles is still seen here as the capital of the Mexican disapora. Los Angeles 'has been generous, and we Mexicans have been generous with this city,' Sheinbaum said. According to the Mexican foreign ministry, 42 Mexican citizens were arrested in the recent raids, 37 men and 5 women. Four had previous removal orders and have already been expelled back to Mexico; two others agreed to return to Mexico voluntarily. Ronald Johnson, the U.S. ambassador in Mexico City, defended the Trump administration crackdown, while also praising Mexico and its people. 'The violent protesters in LA don't represent the Mexican people: dignified and hard-working, that we know and respect,' Johnson wrote in Spanish on X. 'Our actions protect every community and reinforce the rule of law. Mexico is our partner and our nations are profoundly united.' Sheinbaum's reaction to the clashes in Los Angeles is in line with her efforts to avoid disputes with the Trump administration. Her motto has been: 'cooperation, not subjugation.' The president has criticized Trump's mass deportation agenda, but said that Mexico welcomes its deported citizens. To date, Mexican authorities say, deportations from the United States to Mexico have not spiked, despite the Trump administration policies. In recent years, the United States has removed about 200,000 Mexican citizens back to Mexico each year. Special correspondent Cecilia Sánchez Vidal contributed.

LA immigration riots ‘preventable' if Sacramento Dems had acted, failed policies caused chaos, GOP says
LA immigration riots ‘preventable' if Sacramento Dems had acted, failed policies caused chaos, GOP says

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

LA immigration riots ‘preventable' if Sacramento Dems had acted, failed policies caused chaos, GOP says

The ongoing Los Angeles riots could have been stopped in Sacramento and not have reached the point of federal intervention if Democrats had passed a Republican effort to improve coordination between state, local and federal law enforcement in terms of immigration, GOP leaders said. "Federal authorities doing the vital work of immigration enforcement have been met with obstruction and violence on the streets in Los Angeles," California Assembly Minority Leader James Gallagher, R-Yuba City, told Fox News Digital on Monday. "Make no mistake: These agitators and failed California policies caused this chaos. It will not be tolerated and many of them have already found out," Gallagher said. In that regard, Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, R-San Diego, said his caucus had a fix for the issues that led to the immigration raids that sparked the rioting. Maxine Waters Taunts Armed Agents After Feds Slam Door In Her Face "California Republicans had a solution in our Senate Bill 554, but the sanctuary city crowd brought this on themselves by prohibiting state and local law enforcement from cooperating with the feds to identify violent illegal immigrants in prisons and jails," Jones said. Read On The Fox News App SB 554 would have adjusted existing California law under the California Values Act, which generally prohibits state law enforcement from investigating, detaining or questioning suspects for immigration-related purposes. Instead, the bill, which Jones said Democrats had tanked, would have allowed for improved communication with federal immigration and law enforcement agencies. Ak Natives Sound Off On Biden Energy Bans As Trump Officials Tour Tundra "Now the feds have to run broader raids, like what we're seeing in LA, which sweep up way more people," Jones said. "This whole thing was easily preventable." Just north of Jones' hometown, he said the ICE raids that occurred leading up to the unrest were characterized by an increase in "collateral arrests," a term used to describe illegal immigrants not specifically targeted by the feds in any particular operation who are also detained. That has happened, he said, because state and local authorities hadn't handed over some of the targeted suspects in the first place. Meanwhile, Gov. Gavin Newsom appeared to blame President Donald Trump for the unrest, saying it is "exactly what [he] wanted." "He flamed the fires and illegally acted to federalize the National Guard." Fox News Digital reached out to California Senate President Pro-Tempore Mike McGuire, R-Healdsburg, for response to Republicans' article source: LA immigration riots 'preventable' if Sacramento Dems had acted, failed policies caused chaos, GOP says

Minnesota budget deal cuts health care for adults who entered the US illegally
Minnesota budget deal cuts health care for adults who entered the US illegally

Hamilton Spectator

time43 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

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. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store