This chart shows where the state would have been had the legislature not passed the disastrous 2012 tax plan. We would be funding K-12 and higher education at respectable levels, adhering to what we promised Kansans for our roads, and likely had room to spare for targeted tax cuts and a comfortable ending balance.
- An amendment was offered during debate to protect any future education cuts from unilateral allotments by Governor Brownback. The amendment failed, which made obvious there is no intent to truly fund this bill.
Myth 3, Shawnee Mission Supports It:
It is the Superintendent’s job to support the needs of his district. He is doing his job. I am elected to represent the people of the 25th District, however my job also requires me to carefully weigh the consequences of my decisions statewide. They call this “voting your conscience and your district.” Oftentimes, it is a delicate balance. In this case, I received several hundred emails from constituents – all parents and patrons of the district, asking me to oppose this bill. It represents one of those rare opportunities to vote both conscience and district together. I respectfully disagree with the SMSD position because I do not believe this action was the ONLY recourse available to address the concerns with the funding formula.
Myth #4, It’s the Last Train:
To attempt to replace the current 20+ year funding formula with one introduced, heard, and passed in less than 7 days is a disservice to every Kansas student. If the intent is to reformulate school finance, we owe it a more deliberative process. This is a massive policy change that has very little public scrutiny – an example of Washington style politics where we pass the bill to see what is in it. The ramifications and unintended consequences of such an ill-conceived and poorly vetted plan will impact our state for years to come. Supporters call this a “two-year time out” while we work on a new formula, but we do not get to have a time out from our responsibilities in real life, nor do our children have the luxury of a time-out in their growth and development. I am not against changing and improving our formula, but absolutely do not support the full repeal of the existing one BEFORE that process even begins.
Supporters argued that this was our only chance to change the funding formula, which is total nonsense. We have the power to make other choices besides the “either or” proposition this bill represented. Leadership continues the practice of providing false choices, limiting our options to “pass this or we will cut the budget.” Again, I must respectfully, but firmly, disagree.
Myth #5, Good for JoCo:
What is “good for Johnson County” at this moment is rarely good for us in the long term. If the legislature neglects the quality of K-12 education, it will damage the health of our economy and our quality of life in Johnson County. Much of Johnson County’s economic growth and success is due in great part to the intellect and industrious nature of our rural transplants. To ignore the value of providing quality education to every Kansas student is irresponsible and ignores Johnson County’s attractiveness to our rural neighbors.
I was preparing another email to update you on last week’s activities, but this bill and its immediacy took precedence. Thank you for your indulgence as this issue eclipses most others for the entire session. Please do not hesitate to reply with your thoughts and I look forward to continuing our work to bring common sense concepts to the Capitol.