custom ad
NewsJanuary 9, 2004

Associated Press WriterJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Gov. Bob Holden told the state Board of Education on Friday that he supports the more than 240 school districts that filed a lawsuit this week challenging the state's school funding formula...

Kelly Wiese

Associated Press WriterJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Gov. Bob Holden told the state Board of Education on Friday that he supports the more than 240 school districts that filed a lawsuit this week challenging the state's school funding formula.

Holden, a Democrat, said lawmakers have not sufficiently funded schools and left districts with no choice but to go to court.

"The districts that filed this suit are right," he said. They're taking the only course of action left to them by a Republican Legislature that has turned its back on them."

The districts claim the state's school funding formula does not provide enough money for schools and distributes the money unfairly. The formula gives more money to poor districts and less to wealthier ones, but a wide disparity in spending still exists. Plus, the formula has been underfunded because of a tight budget in recent years.

Holden also said he would propose measures again this year, including increasing tobacco taxes, to provide additional money for education.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

Last year, Holden asked lawmakers to eliminate some business tax breaks and to increase taxes on tobacco, casinos and wealthier Missourians to generate money for public schools and other services. The Legislature ignored most of his proposals, and the fight could be even tougher this time around, as it's an election year.

Holden asked the state Education Board to provide assistance to the school districts and the state as the case makes its way through the court system, and to impress upon legislators the need for funding schools "is real and dire."

"Now is not the time to turn our back after so much progress," he said.

State Board President Tom Davis, of Kansas City, told Holden the board would do what it could.

Davis was on the board when the first lawsuit on state school funding was filed in November 1990, and schools ultimately won in January 1993.

"We will be alert tirelessly to try to restore funding to education," he said.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!