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Lawmakers Back Off Proposal To Share Referenda With Charter Schools

House Education Committee Chair Bob Behning (R-Indianapolis) speaks during a committee meeting.
Lauren Chapman/IPB News
House Education Committee Chair Bob Behning (R-Indianapolis) speaks during a committee meeting.

Lawmakers backed off a proposal Monday that would have forced school districts to share referendum dollars with nearby charter schools.

Part of a bill sponsored by House Education Committee Chair Bob Behning (R-Indianapolis) would have required traditional public school districts to share funding from voter-approved property tax increases with the area’s charter schools.

Behning offered an amendment for the committee to remove that language from the bill after its initial hearing last week. He previously said he hoped it would improve funding equity for charter schools.

The bill still includes a handful of changes focused on charters and the sale of school buildings.

It would cut the time school districts have to wait before selling unused or vacant buildings from two years to 90 days. Indiana law says charter schools can purchase those buildings from districts for as little as $1.

It would also let charter schools give preferred admission to siblings of school alumni, and add two more members to the state’s charter school board.

The amended bill passed the committee 9-4.

Jeanie Lindsay is a multimedia education reporter covering education issues for IPB News based at WFIU in Bloomington. Before coming to Indiana, she attended the University of Washington and worked as a regional radio reporter covering the Washington legislature and local stories for KNKX in Seattle.
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