School districts on Long Island and across New York State dodged a bullet last month when the legislature rejected Gov. David A. Paterson’s call for a midyear cut in K-12 education aid. But their luck is about to run out.
Savvy school officials already realize that Paterson’s 2010-11 state budget proposal, due to be presented on Tuesday, is virtually certain to call for a cut in school aid in the year ahead. In fact, for the state to have any hope of fixing its busted finances, that cut had better be an extra large one.
School aid will consume nearly $21 billion in general fund taxes and lottery receipts this fiscal year, making K-12 education the largest single item in the non-federally funded portion of the state budget. Temporary federal stimulus funds are being used to underwrite another $1.4 billion in school aid this year. But the stimulus is scheduled to shrink in 2010-11, and then to disappear…
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