RESEARCH REPORTS      NEWS      BECOME A MEMBER      EDUCATION RESOURCES      EVENTS      CONTACT US


Join Our Email List
To receive our research reports
Email:  

find us on facebook

find us on twitter

Click here to support our independent,
non-partisan research
Donate button
 


Crime & Security (12)
Economy (49)
Education (55)
Elderly & Disabilities (2)
Energy (11)
Environment (21)
Family Issues (6)
Government Spending (28)
Healthcare (23)
Housing (11)
Immigration (10)
Poverty (16)
Social Issues (13)
Substance Abuse (2)
Taxes (38)
Transportation (20)
Uncategorized (2)
Utah Priorities Project 2008 (14)
Utah Priorities Project 2010 (6)
Utah Priorities Project 2012 (17)
Voting & Elections (11)
Water Supply (10)


RSS Feed (What's this?)

Education Funding - Thanks for the Start, But a Long Way Remains (04/08/2013)

Utah’s overwhelmed teachers (04/06/2013)

News roundup: GOP, Taxes and Romney (03/29/2013)

More Utah schools to get elementary arts program (03/29/2013)

Bob Bernicks Notebook: Should Utah Hike Taxes to Pay for Education (03/29/2013)

More Headlines...
 
  Today's
political
News...


 
Utah’s Education Funding Effort: State Faces Long-Term Challenges

Each gubernatorial election year, Utah Foundation identifies the public policy issues Utahns find most important through our Utah Priorities Project. In that research, Utahns consistently rank education as one of the most important issues. In the 2010 election cycle, when voters were asked their level of concern on various education topics, funding ranked highest among all education issue areas. Because of this, information about current education funding and historical trends is vital knowledge for voters and policy makers.

The U.S. Census Bureau recently released data on education spending and revenue in each state for fiscal year 2009. Utah ranked last in the nation in per-pupil spending, a position it has held since 1988.  This low ranking in per-pupil spending is in part the result of the high proportion of children to the general population in Utah.  However, Utah Foundation has also noted that there has been a significant decline in the public education funding effort since 1995, a trend that, despite additional funds from the economic stimulus package and the recent state budget surplus, still continues.

In this report, as in previous reports published by Utah Foundation regarding education funding, funding effort is defined as public education revenues per $1,000 of personal income.  This measure shows how willing Utahns and their elected officials are to collectively commit tax dollars to education.  It also shows whether education funds are growing in line with the overall growth of Utah’s economy.  The new data from the Census Bureau show that in 2009, Utah’s education funding effort was just under $48 per $1,000 of personal income, meaning that taxes paid for public education equaled about 4.8% of all income earned in the state.  Utah’s national ranking for this effort is 26th, or right about the national average.

This ranking is a marked shift from the mid-1990s and previous decades, when Utah placed within the top 10 states for K-12 education funding effort. Many observers, thinking of past performance, still argue that Utah is exerting a heavy effort to fund education, that the state is doing as much as it can, and that per-pupil ratios are only low because Utah has so many children to educate. In reality, Utah is not exerting a heavy effort and has not since the 1990s.  Previous Utah Foundation research shows that since the mid-1990s, rather than emphasizing funding for public education, state policymakers have placed a higher priority on growth in budgets for other programs or on reducing taxes.

Read this Research Report


Leave a Comment on This Report

Feel free to fully express your opinion,
but we will delete offensive comments or spam.

You can follow any comments on this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.