On March 2 and 3, 2009, the House and Senate Appropriations Committees held their annual hearings on the education budget. Disability advocates attended the hearings, along with many other education lobby groups.
Special education was a hot topic of discussion at the hearings. Several Representatives and Senators expressed their opinions that the current state formula [...]
On March 2 and 3, 2009, the House and Senate Appropriations Committees held their annual hearings on the education budget. Disability advocates attended the hearings, along with many other education lobby groups.
Special education was a hot topic of discussion at the hearings. Several Representatives and Senators expressed their opinions that the current state formula (or lack of one) for special education does not provide the resources needed by their local schools. Legislators asked Secretary Zahorchak for his opinion on this issue. He responded by making the following kinds of statements:
(1) The issue of special education funding needs to be studied before the Department can make a recommendation for changing the system. The Department does not have the data it needs.
(2) State investments in early childhood education and core elementary school improvements may lower the demand for special education resources without changing the formula.
Disability advocates and others disagreed with the Secretary’s responses. Pennsylvania’s funding system for special education is broken and must be fixed this year, using a needs-based formula that counts students and considers the resources required for a quality education.
Monday’s House Appropriations Hearing on Public Education with Department of Education Secretary Dr. Gerald Zahorchak has been rescheduled to Wednesday.
The Senate Hearing with Dr. Zahorchak is still scheduled for 10 a.m. Tuesday.
Attend the following hearings in Harrisburg, where Department of Education Secretary Dr. Gerald Zahorchak will testify:
March 2 – House Appropriations Hearing on Public Education.
March 3 – Senate Appropriations Hearing on Public Education.
Attend the following hearings in Harrisburg, where Department of Education Secretary Dr. Gerald Zahorchak will testify:
March 2 – House Appropriations Hearing on Public Education.
March 3 – Senate Appropriations Hearing on Public Education.
PAGES
SPECIAL EDUCATION FUNDING
Q&A on Special Education Funding Reform
Our bills from 2010: HB 704
SB 940Read the full report:Costing-out Special Education Funding
Read the executive summary: Costing-out Study: Executive Summary
View statewide data report:
Pa. Data on Special EducationView a presentation on:HB 704
DRAFT: State Survey on Special Education Funding Formulas
SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
There are approximately 40 organizations supporting special education funding reforms, including:
The full list of supporting organizations is on the About page.
CONTACTS
Education Law Center
In Philadelphia:
Baruch Kintisch
215-238-6970
bkintisch@elc-pa.org
In Pittsburgh:
Sandra Zelno
412-255-6414
szelno@elc-pa.orgDisability Rights Network of PA
Sallie Lynagh
1-800-390-1279
slynagh@drnpa.orgThe Arc of Pennsylvania
Pam Klipa
717-234-2621
pklipa@thearcpa.orgGood Schools Pennsylvania
Janis Risch
215-332-2700
janis@goodschoolspa.orgCATEGORIES
- Action Items (22)
- Media (19)
- News (35)
- Organizing (6)
TAGS
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