School & District Management State of the States

State of the States 2014: Kansas

By Evie Blad — January 22, 2014 1 min read
Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican, greets lawmakers before his State of the State speech at the statehouse in Topeka. He promised Kansas legislators that the tax cuts he championed would spur economic growth and pay for various initiatives, including his all-day kindergarten proposal.
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Gov. Sam Brownback (R)
Date of Speech: Jan. 15

Gov. Brownback used his speech to state lawmakers to call for full-day kindergarten at every public school in the Sunflower State.

Currently, the state funds half-day kindergarten, and districts kick in local funds to support full-day kindergarten if they want to offer it. The governor has supported a proposal that would increase state funding levels by annual increments of $16 million over five years so that the state could gradually assume the full-day kindergarten costs.

The governor also singled out the state’s Supreme Court justices, who were expected to rule soon on a lawsuit seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in additional state school funding and were seated in the audience.

“Let us resolve that our schools remain open and are not closed by the courts or anyone else,” Gov. Brownback said.

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A version of this article appeared in the January 22, 2014 edition of Education Week as Kansas

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