Democratic leaders in the House and Senate say itโs full steam ahead for a plan to dramatically reduce the number of school districts in Vermont, despite a task forceโs recommendation that they abandon the controversial proposal.
Streamlining governance in Vermontโs education system is the critical first step in a sweeping education reform law approved by Democratic lawmakers and Republican Gov. Phil Scott earlier this year. A special commission created by the Legislature to redraw district maps, however, has delivered an alternative proposal that relies on voluntary mergers, and new cooperative sharing agreements, to achieve economies of scale.
House Speaker Jill Krowinski said Wednesday that she appreciates the work done this summer and fall by the Vermont School District Redistricting Task Force. But she said sheโll be urging members of her chamber to vote to create new school district boundaries during the next legislative session.
โWe have come to the conclusion that โฆ consolidation needs to happen. And the question is, โHow do you do it?โ Krowinski said Wednesday. โAnd thatโs where youโre seeing this tension. What is the best map? What is the best scenario to make sure our kids are thriving, that they are getting the best education at a price we can afford?โ
Senate President Pro Tem Phil Baruth was less complimentary of the task forceโs work. The Chittenden County Democrat said Wednesday that it had abrogated the mandate given to it by lawmakers, echoing Gov. Scottโs stance.
The task force was co-chaired by Democratic lawmakers.
โWhen you are charged by majorities in the House and the Senate to do a task, and you accept an appointment to a body to perform that task, itโs not up to you and itโs not within your purview to say, โNo, weโre going to do something completely different,โโ Baruth said.
The Senate leader said that under the new education reform law, Act 73, creating new districts is the only path to a new funding system that offers the surest way to control school spending.
Act 73 would largely replace the local school budgeting process with a more centralized approach in which schools are given a โfoundation formulaโ based on enrollment figures, student need and other factors.
โWhat the foundation formula does is it sets a ceiling for every district. โฆ It says to them, โYouโre only going to be able to spend this much,โโ Baruth said. โThe way the system works right now is there is no cap, and thatโs part of our problem.โ
Jericho Rep. Edye Graning, the Democratic co-chair of the task force, said it became clear to her and fellow members that redistricting wasnโt going to achieve the broader goals in the reform law.
โWhen we started digging into all of that, we realized that drawing lines on a map wasnโt going to solve the cost issue that Vermonters are facing every day,โ Graning said.
The panel instead proposed creating nonprofit entities that would exist outside existing district frameworks. These โCooperative Education Service Areasโ would, according to the taskforce, allow districts to enter into regional contracts for services such as transportation, payroll systems and special education.
โWe thought that would be a much faster way to get a lower cost to Vermonters through property taxes,โ Graning said. โMerging districts takes years. Adding cooperative services doesnโt.โ
Time is of the essence for lawmakers as they seek to control costs in the education system. The Vermont Department of Taxes this week issued a projection that shows property taxes rising by 11.9% on average next year.
