Education Funding News in Brief

Michigan Legislators Pass Budget Cutting K-12 Education Spending

By The Associated Press — October 13, 2009 1 min read
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Michigan lawmakers last week passed a new $12.8 billion budget for public schools in fiscal 2010, but still must finish an overall state government spending plan for the next year.

Both the Democratic-controlled House and Republican-led Senate voted late on Oct. 8 to cut K-12 funding by the equivalent of $165 per student in the current academic year. Overall K-12 funding would drop by $482 million from fiscal 2009. The votes were a breakthrough in the impasse that caused legislators to miss a deadline to pass a budget plan and erase a $2.8 billion deficit.

State departments are now running on a budget that expires Oct. 31, but K-12 schools have no budget at all. The bill passed last week would fix that, assuming Gov. Jennifer Granholm signs it. The school deal is better than the $218 per-student cut that lawmakers had rejected earlier.

A version of this article appeared in the October 14, 2009 edition of Education Week as Michigan Legislators Pass Budget Cutting K-12 Education Spending

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