The Newton school board voted 6-1 Monday night in favor of a resolution that supports legal action against the state to increase funding for schools.
The board approved the resolution with no discussion.
Board president Carol Sue Stayrook Hobbs commented on why she supported the lawsuit after the meeting.
“Based on No Child Left Behind, we can be severely penalized if we do not make progress,” she said. “The only reason we are making those gains and are at or above No Child standards is because we are investing the time and money and personnel into intervening with students who have needs.
“With this funding we are not going to be able to do it.”
Stayrook Hobbs cited concerns the state would further cut the school budget as one of the reasons she supported the lawsuit resolution.
Schools for Fair Funding, an organization of Kansas school districts of which Newton is a part, filed the Montoy vs. Kansas lawsuit in 2005 in attempts to get the state to increase school funding.
The lawsuit was successful, and the state implemented a three-year plan to increase school funding to satisfy the lawsuit.
However, the recession resulted in revenue shortfalls for the state.
The state cut school funding by 22 percent from the levels implemented under the three-year plan.
The Newton district cut almost $1.4 million from the current school year’s budget because of state funding shortfalls.
Because of a decline in state property valuations and an increase in the funds needed to meet the state’s obligations for funding at-risk students, the district could face cuts of an additional $425,183 for the current school year.
The state is facing a $96.4 million budget shortfall for this school year. If the state makes up half of that deficit from school budgets, Newton will face an additional cut of $384,689 for this budget year.
Next year, the state is estimating further shortfalls in state funding, which could mean as much as $2.1 million in additional cuts for Newton.
In 2012, stimulus funds dry up, which could mean budget cuts of as much as $670 per student for a budget shortfall of almost $3.4 million for Newton.
If these scenarios prove true, Newton could face cuts of more than $6.3 million in the next three years. That equals about 34.6 percent of the district’s general fund budget.
With budget cuts that deep, Stayrook Hobbs said many of the program that make students successful and enhance education, such as art, music and athletics, would be lost.