{"id":97909,"date":"2023-04-12T21:30:00","date_gmt":"2023-04-13T05:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/hard-math-begins-on-education-funding-boost\/"},"modified":"2023-04-13T18:17:06","modified_gmt":"2023-04-14T02:17:06","slug":"hard-math-begins-on-education-funding-boost","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/hard-math-begins-on-education-funding-boost\/","title":{"rendered":"Hard math begins on education funding boost"},"content":{"rendered":"
Somebody’s going to pay the bill if there’s an education funding increase and the state lawmakers now considering the proposal are asking who that’s going to be.<\/p>\n
The merits (or lack thereof) of an increase were the focus of the Senate Education Committee earlier this session, but the emphasis shifted Thursday when the Senate Finance Committee spent most of the day giving its first consideration to Senate Bill <\/a>52<\/a>. The bill increases the current Base Student Allocation (BSA) of $5,960 by $1,000 next year and $348 the following year, and includes some additional accountability requirements for school districts.<\/p>\n About 75 people signed up to testify in person and online Thursday — with all but a couple supporting the bill — and hundreds more residents have offered written testimony<\/a> that also mostly favor the increases. Several local youths were among those appearing in person, including Juneau Montessori School student Caleb Schane, 13, who said without the increase activities such as their school play and a class trip participants have raised money for may not be possible.<\/p>\n “Our schools are also losing teachers,” she said. “We currently have a class of four different grades all together because one of the teachers left during COVID and it is extremely hard to find a teacher who is trained to teach at a Montessori classroom. And why should they come to Alaska when there is better pay and benefits in other places?”<\/p>\n