Current:Home > InvestPennsylvania schools face spending down reserves or taking out loans as lawmakers fail to act -Blueprint Wealth Network
Pennsylvania schools face spending down reserves or taking out loans as lawmakers fail to act
View
Date:2025-04-14 23:54:39
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Some of Pennsylvania’s school districts may have to empty their reserves or take out loans to open for the fall semester because billions of dollars in state aid is held up in a month-old political stalemate.
State payments to school districts normally start going out by the end of July, but the standoff between Gov. Josh Shapiro and a politically divided Legislature appears sure to stretch well into August, and perhaps beyond.
A dispute over education funding has contributed to holding up the proposed $45 billion state budget. One stumbling block is a whether to create a $100 million program subsidizing students in the lowest performing districts so they can attend private or religious schools.
In Steelton-Highspire School District, officials are discussing whether to take out a loan to ensure the district can open when school begins on Aug. 24, Superintendent Mick Iskric said.
The district has been working with a deficit for 14 years, Iskric said, and there’s no funding to bridge the gap when the state starts missing payments to the roughly 1,400-student district just outside Harrisburg.
“Our payments that come in go right out the door,” he said. “We’re impacted immediately.”
Any loan, however, will likely come with high interest rates and fees that would further compound the district’s deficit, Iskric said.
Lawmakers are not scheduled to return to the Capitol until mid-September, but Senate leadership has said they may return earlier if negotiations wrap up.
Senate President Pro Tempore Kim Ward, R-Westmoreland, said in a statement that the chamber understands it is important to finalize the budget ahead of the school year.
Counties are also anticipating stalled payments and hundreds of millions of dollars that normally go to Pennsylvania’s state-related universities are also being held up, potentially meaning higher tuition.
Education funding became one of the thorniest parts of the budget process after a landmark court ruling said the way Pennsylvania pays for public schools violates the rights of students in the state’s poorest districts.
The proposal to subsidize private or religious school tuition for students in the lowest performing districts advanced in the Republican-controlled Senate, which found an ally in Shapiro. But Democrats who control the House opposed it,after pushing unsuccessfully for more public school funding for Pennsylvania’s 500 school districts.
The state will miss its first payment to schools, about $190 million earmarked for special education, at the end of July. A delay past mid-August means districts will miss the first portion of their basic education funding, $1.1 billion, which typically is delivered at the end of that month.
About $40 million in federal funding — which supports the state’s poorest districts, after-school programs, migrant education and more — typically starts flowing this month. Those dollars are also snarled in the budget impasse.
Districts that have to take out loans to bridge a funding gap may be able to pay off the debt when the state starts making payments, but they will still be on the hook for interest and fees, Iskric said. That happened in 2015, when a drawn-out budget feud left districts scrambling to cover costs.
The previous stalemate showed why it is important for districts to maintain enough money to plug holes when state funding stalls, said Susquehanna Community School District Superintendent Bronson Stone.
Stone’s is among Pennsylvania’s poorer districts and gets a majority of its funding from the state. It has built enough of a reserve in recent years to get through October, he said.
“If it lasts beyond October, then we’d have to reconfigure finances and look for possibly some support, whether through borrowing or things along those lines,” he said. “I’d hope it wouldn’t last that long.”
Hazleton Area School District can make it just about two months given its $6 million biweekly payroll, said Superintendent Brian Uplinger.
The impasse could have a nearly immediate impact on pre-K programs and daycare, plus an early intervention program for all Luzerne County families who have children with special needs.
The district would begin considering borrowing in November, Uplinger said. Before that, programs like athletics and extracurriculars could see cuts to make ends meet.
“Everything we do is for our students. We want to make sure they’re getting the best and most they can while they’re with us,” he said. “If we’re not getting funded appropriately, or at all, our programming suffers and then they suffer.”
__
Brooke Schultz is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
veryGood! (479)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Planned Fossil Fuel Production Vastly Exceeds the World’s Climate Goals, ‘Throwing Humanity’s Future Into Question’
- WeWork files for bankruptcy years after office-sharing company was valued at $47 billion
- World Series 9-inning games averaged 3 hours, 1 minute — fastest since 1996
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Dillon Brooks pokes the bear again, says he's 'ready to lock up' LeBron James in rematch
- US plans to build a $553 million terminal at Sri Lanka’s Colombo port in rivalry with China
- Manchester City and Leipzig advance in Champions League. Veterans Pepe and Giroud shine
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Michael Strahan will not return to 'Good Morning America' this week amid 'personal family matters'
Ranking
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- The Best Host and Hostess Gifts of 2023 That'll Leave a Lasting Impression
- NFL power rankings Week 10: Red-hot Ravens rise over Eagles for No. 1 slot
- A top Chinese military official visits Moscow for talks on expanding ties
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Florida House passes measures to support Israel, condemn Hamas
- An Alabama mayor ended his life after a website showed pictures of him cross-dressing
- What's the best way to ask for a flexible telework schedule? Ask HR
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Arizona woman dies days after being trampled by an elk
A bad economy can be good for your health
Jewish Americans, motivated by 'duty to protect Israel,' head overseas to fight Hamas
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Israeli ambassador to the U.S. says Hamas is playing for time in releasing hostages
'I needed a new challenge': Craig Counsell explains why he went to Chicago Cubs
Ex-CIA officer accused of drugging, sexually abusing dozens of women pleads guilty to federal charges