A Primer on Wisconsin K-12 Revenue Caps

Alan Borsuk:

There is no serious prospect for eliminating revenue caps and not much chance in the foreseeable future for annual increases anything like in days of old. Combine that with reductions in other areas, such as federal aid, and the forecast is for money to stay tight for schools.

Some school districts have used local referendum votes to get more operating money than the revenue caps allow. Success in passing such referendums is on the rise as more people appear willing to pay to boost education in their own community’s schools. But that has brought concern that lower-income communities, such as Milwaukee, are the ones least likely to conduct or approve referendums. The net effect could be to increase disparities between well-to-do and not-well-to-do districts.

Is spending more on education worth it? A lot of money has been spent on education programs that haven’t succeeded, and many schools used to be too generous in their spending habits. There are studies that conclude there is no match between more spending and better student achievement.

But schools need adequate fuel in the tank. That’s why people who have means almost always live in communities that have high-quality offerings in their schools, or they send their kids to expensive private schools.