Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Open enrollment legislation wins initial approval in Missouri House


By Annelise Hanshaw

A bill that would allow students to enroll in neighboring school districts won initial approval in the Missouri House for the fourth year in a row Tuesday on an 83-69 vote.

It is the first bill to be debated by the full House this legislative session. It must be approved one more time by the House before it is sent to the Senate for consideration.


(Photo- Rep. Brad Pollitt, R-Sedalia, presents his open-enrollment legislation on the Missouri House floor last March. This year is the bill's fourth year to gain an initial approval from the originating chamber- Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Bill sponsor Rep. Brad Pollitt, a Republican from Sedalia, described the proposal as “minor compared to what others want to do.”








“The status quo says the bill goes too far. The reform side says it doesn’t go far enough,” he said in his introduction of the bill.

A nearly identical bill narrowly passed the House in a 85-68 vote last year, just three more than a constitutional majority of the chamber. New to the legislation this year is the creation of an online portal that would track the number of students who have applied to enroll in accepting districts.

If passed, the legislation would allow students to leave their local school to enroll in districts that opt into the open enrollment. Districts are not required to add staff or programs, such as special education, for the program.

Transportation would be parents’ responsibility, unless the child qualifies for free or reduced lunch or has transportation under an individualized education plan. The bill calls for a fund to pay for bussing these students.

Pollitt placed a 3% cap on the number of students who can leave a district annually under open enrollment. He proposed a 1% cap for districts with a high number of students qualifying for free or reduced lunch, describing it as a compromise for the Senate.

He removed the 1% cap upon advice from a caucus policy committee.

Some worry that, without that provision, open enrollment could lead to resegregation in some areas.

Rep. Kathy Steinhoff, a Columbia Democrat, complimented Pollitt but said the lack of “diversity protections” and other negatives “outweigh the positives.”

“One of the concerns is that it’s going to create a slow drain for several schools and districts,” she said.

Rep. Marlene Terry, a St. Louis Democrat, said the legislation would “destroy (her) school.”

“We do agree that parents should have choices, but what I keep hearing is a better environment or a better education,” she said. “Until you can tell me how you’re going to fix the environment and the education in the public school system to where my children stay, I’m going to continually be against this bill.”

Rep. Barbara Phifer, a Democrat from St. Louis, described open enrollment as a “patch on a big problem.” The problem, she said, is unequal funding of public schools.








“We pretend that there is no school choice, but we have made an economic decision here in the state of Missouri that those who are wealthy get better education than those who are not wealthy,” Phifer said. “We can argue about that, and we can actually change the way that we fund public education so that we have more equity.”

Rep. Peter Merideth, a St. Louis Democrat, said school funding was a timely topic. Earlier in the day, he had discussed the formula that determines state funding of public schools in the budget committee.

He said the state funding has lagged behind inflation. Wealthy communities’ local funding has allowed schools to be better equipped, and those without deep pockets may lose students under open enrollment.

Rep. Stephanie Hein, a Springfield Democrat, attempted to amend the bill to raise the base teacher pay to $46k statewide by the 2027-28 school year. The bill title would also change to “elementary and secondary education.”

Her attempt to change the title failed on a 44-109 party-line vote after Pollitt said it opened the bill “to anything else to do with public education.”

Pollitt said he was in favor of increasing teacher salaries but wanted his bill to stand alone.



Last year, Pollitt’s bill died waiting to come to the floor of the Senate. He told The Independent Senate leaders attached his legislation to a bill about teacher recruitment and retention in an attempt to avoid a filibuster.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Randy - Sorry to use this Comment Section - - But could not find any direct Blog method on your Site other than your Email Address to Request - A Story Update about a Local Judge.

I think it is very important that all Local Jasper County Residents - Be aware of the Quality and Ethics of their Elected Officials - Judge John Nicholas, clearly shows how Entitled he Thinks he is - by acting this way - Could You - Report about this Local Story on an Elected Official that is Completely - Out-Of-Touch with his Position in our Society.

Missouri Supreme Court issues reprimand to Jasper County judge

KSNF/KODE — A Jasper County judge receives a reprimand from the Missouri Supreme Court today.

The Commission on Retirement, Removal, and Discipline issued the punishment against Associate Circuit Judge John Nicholas.

The reprimand comes after Carthage Police Chief Bill Hawkins and City Manager Greg Dagnan filed a complaint against Nicholas for rude and vulgar treatment after a storm knocked down a utility cable at the judge’s house in May of last year.

Nicholas called the City demanding city resources be diverted from “more pressing emergency situations” like downed trees and power lines in city streets, to his residence instead.

City leaders and emergency personnel placed Nicholas low on the priority list because the downed cable was not dangerous.

However, Nicholas proceeded to call city officials, repeatedly and at one point, complained the City was “spending money to ‘prosecute his friend’,” former Parks and Rec Director, Mark Peterson, instead of using resources on other matters.

The Commission concluded that Judge Nicholas was “known as and identified himself as a judge.” It also ruled that he used his “title and office to demand and get preferential treatment.”

Finally, the Commission stated the judge was “rude to the responders and city employees and freely used vulgarities in an effort to get his way.”

The reprimand order says Judge Nicholas admitted he engaged in the misconduct set out in the Commission’s findings and consented to the discipline.



Anonymous said...

Who gets the local school tax money the property owner generated in their home district and how will that be monitored on who gets that money?
How will the receiving districts decide if and how many students they will to accept?
If the elected officials in Jefferson City would do their jobs and fund public education, there would not be a need for this bill.