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Support for early literacy bill remains strong in Oregon, as questions arise about funding

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Pixabay

An early literacy bill that initially had widespread support is now facing pushback from education advocates who say they disagree with how the bill would be funded.

鈥淎 slippery slope.鈥

鈥淩obbing Peter to pay Paul.鈥

A 鈥渕assive structural shift.鈥

For months, Oregon education leaders and advocates have expressed strong support for a in helping young kids in the state learn to read. But those same advocates are coming out against the state Legislature鈥檚 plan for how to fund that initiative.

That鈥檚 because in the last week, legislators have changed how the early literacy legislation, , will be funded.

A subcommittee of the Legislature鈥檚 Joint Ways and Means Committee approved amendments this week that would move away from using money out of the state general fund to support early literacy, as initially proposed. Instead, HB 3198 would pull funding from a corporate income tax, which funds a separate grant program to benefit schools.

Passed in 2019, the Student Success Act funds education accounts through a tax on businesses. Under that law, at least 50% of funds from the tax go to the Student Investment Account, up to 30% go to the Statewide Education Initiatives Account, and at least 20% go to the Early Learning Account.

The Statewide Education Initiatives Account funds several programs, including the state鈥檚 success plans for specific student groups, a school meal program and summer program grants. Early Learning includes grant funds for Preschool Promise and professional learning for child care providers.

All school districts receive funds from the Student Success Act鈥檚 largest pot of funding, the Student Investment Account, with the amount based on a weighted student formula. The goal of that spending is to help students with their mental health or behavioral health needs and to improve academic outcomes for historically underserved student groups.

Amendments to the House Bill 3198 now propose funding a bulk of the state鈥檚 Early Literacy plan through the Student Investment Account.

Julie Neburka from the Legislative Fiscal Office told the subcommittee Monday that the decision was made to use funds from the SIA due to the 鈥渙ngoing,鈥 stable funding generated by the business tax. Neburka added that funding under the SIA is only increasing, and that spending those additional funds on early literacy will not affect 鈥渃urrent programming.鈥

Advocates at the state and local level are pushing against the change, though, both in public statements and during a public hearing in front of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means education subcommittee.

鈥淲hile I appreciate the desire to institutionalize early literacy support, and I would certainly support it, it cannot happen at the expense of the other crucial work funded by the Student Success Act,鈥 said Portland Public Schools Superintendent Guadalupe Guerrero in a statement dated Thursday. In his message, Guerrero asked Portland legislators to vote against the amendments and support 鈥渁dditive funding for the Early Literacy Initiative.鈥

鈥淥regon must address disparate education outcomes across a variety of spheres, and school districts cannot do that well when we pit multiple education initiatives against each other within the same funding source,鈥 Guerrero said.

According to a by the state鈥檚 Legislative Fiscal Office at a work session Wednesday, $115 million is set to come out of the Student Investment Account for 鈥淓arly Literacy Success School Grants.鈥 Ten million would be directed from the Statewide Education Initiatives Account part of the SSA budget and go toward 鈥淓arly Literacy Grants鈥 for community-based organizations. As proposed, those two new grant programs would pull $125 million out of the more than $2 billion in the Student Success Act budget for 2023-2025.

The Oregon Education Association鈥檚 Louis De Sitter called the plan to use SIA funding a 鈥渃ut.鈥

鈥淭he intent of the SIA is to allow local districts to make targeted, equity-focused investments in students based on community need, particularly in mental health and in class size,鈥 De Sitter said during a public hearing Monday.

鈥淏y opening that money up to statewide initiatives, you start a slippery slope of carve outs to critical funds for student support.鈥

Representatives from the Oregon School Employees Association, the Coalition of Oregon School Administrators, and the Oregon School Boards Association all opposed the funding method for the plan, too.

鈥淗onestly, [it] feels like a raid on the SIA, or an ATM, or a piggy bank when we can鈥檛 find funding,鈥 said OSBA鈥檚 Director of Legislative Services Lori Sattenspiel.

Representing Gov. Tina Kotek鈥檚 office as the state鈥檚 Education Initiative Director, Pooja Bhatt applauded the $140 million allocated for early literacy but also expressed concerns about how the plan was taking shape.

鈥淲e too have concerns about the SIA funding mechanism that appears to be a carve out,鈥 Bhatt said.

Kotek had for early literacy in her budget shared earlier this year. The overall state budget for K-12 education in Oregon is still up in the air. It remains a critical unfinished piece of state business, as Senate Republicans continue to freeze legislative progress through their walkout.

After Monday鈥檚 public hearing, the committee reconvened Wednesday for a work session, where Oregon Department of Education Director Colt Gill echoed the concerns shared by other education officials. He called the amendment a 鈥渟ignificant change鈥 to the original framing of the Student Success Act.

In addition to concern about pulling funding from the SIA, Gill warned against the unintended consequences of another aspect of the new amendment to HB 3198. Gill was critical of 鈥渓imiting鈥 funding through the Early Literacy initiative by focusing exclusively on specific schools and districts that need the most help.

鈥淭o me, it鈥檚 similar to somebody suffering a heart attack and offering them a Band-Aid,鈥 Gill said. 鈥淚t would be ineffective and it really does ignore all the preventative work that has to be done.鈥

But despite the pushback, the education subcommittee of Joint Ways and Means approved the amendment, with the three Republicans on the committee voting no.

The bill now moves on to a vote from the full committee.

The initial amendment to the bill showed up online Sunday, June 4. While voting for the amendment, Rep. Ricki Ruiz, D-Gresham, said he was 鈥渦ncomfortable鈥 with the whole process, noting that he鈥檒l be watching implementation closely.

鈥淚鈥檓 a chief sponsor of this bill and I鈥檓 concerned with how this all played out,鈥 Ruiz said.

Copyright 2023 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit .

Elizabeth Miller is a JPR content partner from Oregon Public Broadcasting. Elizabeth is an Ohio native and a graduate of Baldwin Wallace University.