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School funding, parents bill of rights, other education-related measures on today’s Capitol docket

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February 9th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATE 10-a.m.) The senator who is the floor manager of the education funding and parents’ bill of rights bills is ill and these bills will NOT be debated in the Senate today.

(Radio Iowa) – An array of education-related bills will be under consideration at the Iowa Capitol today (Wednesday). The Senate is tentatively scheduled to debate a bill that would increase per pupil spending on Iowa’s public schools by two-and-a-quarter of a percent, slightly less than Governor Reynolds recommended. Senator Jackie Smith, a Democrat from Sioux City, says it isn’t enough to address the workforce crisis in Iowa’s K-through-12 public schools. “School districts across Iowa have thousands of open positions,” Smith says. “…Districts need more money to attract, hire and retain more staff and pay more attractive wages.”

Smith says Iowa ranks 40th in per pupil spending. Senator Julian Garrett, a Republican from Indianola, says there are other ways to evaluate the state investment. “As a rule, when you take into account cost of living, Iowa’s more or less in the middle as far as education funding and teacher salaries,” Garrett says.

House Republicans are proposing a two-and-a-half percent increase in the state’s per pupil allocation to K-through-12 schools — the same as Governor Reynolds — and plan to debate it tomorrow. Republican Representative Cecil Dolecheck of Mount Ayr says Republicans have been careful not to over-promise. “That we can be guaranteed to school districts that we will provide every dollar to the education system that we have promised,” Dolecheck says, “never go back on those promises.”

The Senate’s also scheduled to debate a “parent’s bill of rights” today (Wednesday) that would require schools to get parental consent before a student could access content that could be considered obscene. There will be a subcommittee hearing in the HOUSE on a bill that would force Iowa schools to install cameras so every class could be live-streamed and monitored by parents. House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst of Windsor Heights says Republicans are villainizing teachers.

“They are giving the impression that teachers need to be watched all the time, that teachers can’t be trusted, that teachers are enemies,” Konfrst says. “…Let’s thank teachers. They’ve been working their tails off the last two years and they’re burned out.”

Another bill to be discussed at the Capitol tomorrow (Wednesday) would require the Iowa and Iowa State football teams to play one another each year. It’s scheduled for initial review in a House subcommittee at noon.