INDIANAPOLIS — Hoosier voters approved referendums Tuesday for
Decatur and Wayne township schools in Marion County and districts
serving Duneland, Franklin, Frontier and River Forest schools.
Four other school referendum initiatives failed, in Elkhart, Plymouth, Hanover (Lake County) and DeKalb County.
Of
those that passed, four specifically mentioned student safety needs and
better compensation for attracting and retaining teachers.
The
other two approved referendums were at River Forest, which sought
funding for teachers, staff, transportation and programs, and Frontier,
which asked voters to approve money to fund programs, manage class sizes
and attract and retain teachers.
"It's a little easier to pass a
general fund or operating referendum. Historically it does pass at about
two-thirds to one-third," said Terry Spradlin, executive director of
the Indiana School Boards Association.
"Construction referenda or
controlled projects referenda are a little more difficult to sell to the
public and taxpayers. Those historically pass roughly 55 to 45
percent."
Indiana State Teachers Association President Teresa
Meredith said in a statement Wednesday that declining state funding of
public schools had prompted referendums across Indiana.
"Although
we are happy for the six school districts that passed their referendums,
we acknowledge the tough decisions that will have to be made in the
four districts who did not," Meredith said.
"This system of the
state minimally funding our public schools and forcing many ... to ask
for additional funds from sometimes already struggling communities is
deeply flawed," she continued. "We must do better by the 1.1 million
students who attend our public schools and the hard-working educators
who teach in them."
Hanover and DeKalb sought funds for
construction projects, with Hanover citing security upgrades in part.
The ballot questions for Elkhart and Plymouth, geared toward general
fund revenues, both mentioned school safety and attracting quality
teachers.
The
Indiana General Assembly increased K-12 funding by $753 million in the
budget for 2020 and 2021, including $74 million more for statewide grant
programs such as the Indiana Secured Schools Safety program.
But
that program has a cap on funding and has been geared more toward
addressing threat assessments, technology and hiring school resource
officers. The legislature did allow for a provision that schools could
seek a grant for mental health services.
That limitation, however,
might have led districts, including Plymouth, to seek funding for
mental health support in its referendum.
"Some of them included
social, emotional learning and mental health services, which we were
hopeful that the legislature would fund," Spradlin said. "So districts
are saying we need resources now. It's a growing need to provide
students with those types of supports and services."
Elkhart
Community Schools' plan was defeated by 63 percent of the voters. The
proposal was set to address funding for academic programs, managing
class sizes, school safety initiatives and attracting and retaining
teachers.
Officials there cited economic inflation of 19.7 percent
over the last nine years, compared to a 1.67 percent increase in the
school district's general fund over that same period.