{"id":455,"date":"2025-03-17T14:16:20","date_gmt":"2025-03-17T15:16:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spanishliteratureintranslation.com\/?p=455"},"modified":"2025-03-18T19:28:41","modified_gmt":"2025-03-18T19:28:41","slug":"editorial-colorado-will-renege-on-school-funding-promise-heres-how-lawmakers-should-make-the-cuts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/spanishliteratureintranslation.com\/index.php\/2025\/03\/17\/editorial-colorado-will-renege-on-school-funding-promise-heres-how-lawmakers-should-make-the-cuts\/","title":{"rendered":"Editorial: Colorado will renege on school funding promise. Here\u2019s how lawmakers should make the cuts."},"content":{"rendered":"
Colorado\u2019s budget woes continue with a dire warning last month from the non-partisan budget staff at the state Capitol: \u201cThe budget appears to be on an unsustainable path.\u201d<\/p>\n
The hole Colorado lawmakers are trying to fill is about $1 billion and isn\u2019t the result of reductions in revenue<\/a> \u2013 the state\u2019s economy has been strong the last four years \u2013 but rather is due to rising costs, new programs and the somewhat arbitrary cap on state spending imposed by voters in 1992.<\/p>\n Our general philosophy to plugging this hole is that cuts have got to be across the board — no department should be sacrosanct so that everyone faces a little pain.<\/p>\n This brings us to the tricky situation with education funding.<\/p>\n Collectively, school districts will see state funding increase from $9.8 billion this year to around $10 billion next year under two competing proposals to balance the budget.<\/p>\n That $200 million increase, however, represents a cut from anticipated revenue under a bipartisan and long-overdue deal reached in 2024 to update and improve the school funding formula. School districts are distraught that the deal they reached with the state is now being broken just as the funding formula is implemented for the first time.<\/p>\n \u201cWe had a deal last year that, for a whole host of reasons and probably others that I don\u2019t understand, is not going to be honored,\u201d Scott Smith, CFO of Cherry Creek Public Schools, said during a public meeting about the cuts that was covered by The Colorado Sun<\/a>. \u201cWhy should we trust that any deal we reach now will be honored in the future?\u201d<\/p>\n