Two-thirds of Wisconsin school districts will receive less state aid for 2012-'13
Erin Richards:
Almost two-thirds of Wisconsin's 424 school districts will receive less general state aid in the 2012-'13 school year than they did last year, while some suburban Milwaukee school districts will get a sizable aid boost, according to preliminary state estimates released Friday by the Department of Public Instruction.
In all, the state will provide $4.29 billion in general aid to schools in the second year of Gov. Scott Walker's biennial budget, a small increase over what the state budget set for aid last year - $4.26 billion, according to the DPI.
That's far below what schools received in general aid before Walker and the Republican-controlled Legislature dramatically cut funding for schools and limited districts' ability to make up those funds by raising local taxes - changes that were passed as part of the biennial 2011-'13 state budget.
"It's a bigger balance from last year, but if you compare this to what school districts had two and three years ago, it's a reduction," said Patrick Gasper, spokesman for the DPI.
Madison fared
quite a bit better in this year's redistributed state tax dollar program.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at July 1, 2012 1:40 AM
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