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Education Desk
The Education Desk is our education blog focusing on key areas of news coverage important to the state and its improvement. Evidence of public policy performance and impact will be reported and analyzed. We encourage you to engage in commenting and discussing the coverage of education from pre-natal to Higher Ed.Dusty Rhodes curates this blog that will provide follow-up to full-length stories, links to other reports of interest, statistics, and conversations with you about the issues and stories.About - Additional Education Coverage00000179-2419-d250-a579-e41d385d0000

Bill Links Private School Tax Break To Public School Funding

classroom
Carter Staley
/
NPR Illinois

Illinois’ new school funding plan — approved in August and hailed as a historic change — relies on the legislature to give every school the same state aid it got last year, plus push another $350 million through a new formula. That $350 million is crucial because it’s the part designed to address the inequity that has plagued Illinois schools for decades.

 

State Sen. Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant, a Democrat from Shorewood, wants to make sure lawmakers don't skip that step.

She filed a measure today tying it to a tax break for people who provide private school scholarships.

The tax break was added to the school funding bill in the 11th hour, by negotiators working to craft a compromise plan that Gov. Bruce Rauner would sign.

Rauner takes pride in the fact that he has boosted state aid to public schools. He vetoed the original school funding bill, saying it gave too much money to Chicago Public Schools, but then chose a Chicago Public School as the site of his bill-signing celebration.

Since the General Assembly has a history of “pro-rating” school funding, Bertino-Tarrant wanted to find a way to hold lawmakers to their $350 million promise to public schools. Her legislation would nix those private school tax credits any fiscal year the General Assembly fails to appropriate full funding for public schools.

"It allows the tax credits to still occur, so we're not taking away any of the substance. It's just requiring us to prioritize public education as the state of Illinois should be doing," she says. "When we begin to create a budget, if there is legislation that says we have to put the minimum funding in there before we give these tax credits, it may give more initiative to make sure the minimum is there."

She says Democrats advocated for this clause while school funding was being negotiated. They decided not to oppose the compromise bill, but just tie up loose ends, like this one, after it became law.

 

After a long career in newspapers (Dallas Observer, The Dallas Morning News, Anchorage Daily News, Illinois Times), Dusty returned to school to get a master's degree in multimedia journalism. She began work as Education Desk reporter at NPR Illinois in September 2014.
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