Sunset proposal to force school-finance recalibration defeated after extended floor debate
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
SubscribeSummary
A proposed sunset amendment to Senate File 81, designed to force periodic school-finance recalibrations, failed after senators argued over whether a sunset would create harmful fiscal 'cliffs' or ensure compliance with constitutional and court-ordered obligations.
Senate File 81, the recalibration measure for K–12 public-school finance, saw an extended debate on Feb. 20 over a proposed sunset amendment intended to compel periodic recalibrations.
Senator Scott, supporting the sunset, said it would force future legislatures to pass recalibration legislation on schedule and prevent avoidance of necessary changes: "It forces the legislature to reach the necessary compromises to do a recalibration," he said. Opponents, including Senator Ralphs and others, argued a sunset could create artificial fiscal cliffs that lead to poor decision-making and remove needed legislative flexibility. Senator Ralphs said administrators and other non-instructional staff still need literacy awareness and urged rejection of the sponsor's narrower amendment in an earlier exchange; Senator Pearson and others countered that recalibration is a constitutional requirement and court-imposed obligations demand accountability.
After debate and recorded counts on the floor, the sunset amendment failed and the Senate returned to considering the bill’s text without the sunset provision.
What happens next: The Senate continued with the bill on the calendar. Lawmakers said they still expect to pursue recalibration work and that the chamber would consider technical language in subsequent amendments or committee work.
