Speaker says Chapter 70 minimum aid rose to 150; local officials say more is needed

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Summary

An unidentified speaker said the Chapter 70 minimum aid increased from 104 to 150 (as described in remarks), credited local advocacy at UMass Amherst for the change, but said towns remain "way below where we need to be" because of an inflation cap in the state formula.

An unidentified speaker said recent legislative action increased the Chapter 70 school funding minimum from 104 to 150 (the speaker used the phrasing "per people") and described the change as a win for local schools following advocacy at a UMass Amherst listening session.

The speaker said the increase was intended to address an "inflation glitch" in the Student Opportunity Act and credited town administrators' advocacy for drawing attention to the problem. The speaker added that a 4.5% inflation cap embedded in the state formula had suppressed local aid, leaving the town "way below where we need to be."

The remarks did not include detailed district-level allocations or an exact per-student dollar figure beyond the minimum-aid change cited in the remarks. No local vote or motion on school funding was recorded during the remarks.