School funding: Westerville City Schools will do a little better in new state budget msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bexley City Schools will receive small increase from new state funding formula
Chris Bournea
Bexley City Schools will see only a slight increase in state funding as a result of a new formula in effect for the next two fiscal years: the Fair School Funding Plan.
Ohio lawmakers approved the plan via Amended Substitute House Bill 110. As part of the state s $75 billion, two-year budget, it changes the way schools get money from the state, which will look at both local incomes and property values to determine how much a district will receive in state money and how much of the cost of educating a student it should be able to cover on its own.
School funding: Westerville City Schools will do a little better in new state budget dispatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dispatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Delaware schools: Leaders of district, private school weigh in on new funding formula
Paul Comstock
A two-year increase in state funding might allow Delaware City Schools to postpone a levy for new operating funds for one or two years while still putting replacement levies on the ballot, according to Melissa Swearingen, district treasurer and chief finance officer.
The funding increase stems from part of the state s $75 billion, two-year budget, which will increase funding for a number of central Ohio school district. .
Ohio lawmakers approved the Fair School Funding Plan via amended Substitute House Bill 110, which will be in place for the next two fiscal years.
Ohio s two-year budget holds no funding surprises for Dublin City Schools, superintendent says
But that came as no surprise, according to Superintendent John Marschhausen.
“The state budget is about what we expected,” Marschhausen said about the Ohio General Assembly’s June 28 adoption of the amended Substitute House Bill 110, which will be in place for the next two fiscal years.
Gov. Mike DeWine signed the bill into law June 30.
Known as the Fair School Funding Plan, it changes how school districts receive funding from the state.
Under the plan, the state will consider both local incomes and property values to determine how much a district should be able sustain on its own, and the base cost to educate each student will be predicated on local costs rather than one statewide average.