Click above to enter your address and find your district.

Kenley: Despite Tough Money Challenges, State Remains Committed to Funding K-12 Students

STATEHOUSE (June 23, 2010) -  Hoosier taxpayers have a record they can be proud of when it comes to funding K-12 students, according to State Sen. Luke Kenley, chair of the Senate Committee on Appropriations.

Kenley (R-Noblesville) said in other states, recessionary budget cuts for K-12 have been deep and widespread. Reductions of 10 percent or more have become the norm and some have curtailed calendars or slashed statewide programs.

In Indiana, Kenley said Gov. Mitch Daniels and legislators have worked to protect tuition support. Adjusting for declining revenues, Indiana reduced state agency budgets by 15 percent - or more - before school funding was trimmed by 3.5 percent as a last resort. With K-12 receiving about half the state’s budget, most realized if trends continued, reductions couldn’t be avoided, Kenley noted. 

“Through the years, Indiana has been steadfast in supporting student success,” Kenley said. “Lawmakers have increased overall education funding every year since 1995, including a 10 percent increase during the first five years of the Daniels administration.”

According to Kenley, Indiana’s average funding per child per year hovers around $10,000. He also said Indiana’s average teacher salary, when adjusted for the state’s low cost of living, ranks seventh in the country.

“In 2008, during the worst recession in generations, Indiana teachers’ salaries rose 2.2 percent statewide while average Hoosier workers’ decreased by 2.4 percent,” he said.

Kenley cited these actions as examples of how important student funding is to state officials and how hard lawmakers work to keep it the top priority.

“Political critics may often lash out about school funding, but rarely mention financial hardships faced by Hoosiers today,” Kenley said. “Taxpayers’ ability to fund government is always limited, but especially during a recession.”

Kenley stressed that Indiana residents from both parties are passionate about promoting academic excellence and prioritizing student funding.

 ”We are as committed as any voters and any legislators in any states to quality educations for our children and grandchildren,” Kenley said. “As Indiana heads into a new budget-writing session, K-12 will surely remain our priority and the biggest slice of the pie. But we must all understand the deep national recession has now made that pie smaller for everyone.”

Audio Clip

Action Center Volunteer Today Contribute Now Register to Vote

Paid for and authorized by the Senate Majority Campaign Committee.
Contributions are not deductible for tax purposes.