Senators press for committee substitute on education bill as fuel costs and local contributions shape debate
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Summary
Sen. Tobin said Senate Bill 277 has drawn significant stakeholder input; lawmakers plan a committee substitute and highlighted that rising diesel and heating costs threaten schools' operational funds, prompting a task-force meeting on local contributions and accountability.
Sen. Tobin said Senate Bill 277 has generated extensive stakeholder engagement and that lawmakers are drafting a committee substitute intended to balance access to before- and after-school programming with protections for students' educational experiences.
Tobin said superintendents told lawmakers they are negotiating fuel purchases for the coming school year and face rising diesel and heating costs that could force districts to divert classroom funds to utilities. "We're looking at that and trying to figure out a pathway forward to ensure that we don't supplant dollars that should be for the classroom with paying for fuel," Tobin said. He said the bill's sponsors are coordinating with the finance committee to assess fiscal capacity and possible adjustments to student allocations.
Tobin invited the public to participate in the education funding task force and said next Wednesday's meeting will include a demonstration of AK STAR assessments so lawmakers and the public can see the tests and understand accountability and assessment processes.
A committee substitute is expected to be drafted as rapidly as legislative drafters permit, though Tobin noted competing drafting priorities within the legislature slowed work at times.
