United Group Insurance

GOP lawmakers may send more bus money to Iowa schools

News

February 2nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A state report indicates the fleet of yellow buses owned by Iowa’s public schools traveled more than 40 MILLION miles last year. Some geographically large Iowa school districts are spending more than nine-hundred dollars a year for EACH STUDENT who rides the bus to and from school.

“Some of the larger school districts in some of the far-flung areas of the state are very expensive.” That’s House Speaker Linda Upmeyer. Upmeyer and other Republican lawmakers are offering to supplement some school transportation budgets — but in varying degrees. Republicans in the HOUSE are suggesting a 10-million dollar boost for the coming year.

“To the most needy districts across the state who are struggling with transportation, especially in the rural areas.” That’s Republican Representative Walt Rogers of Cedar Falls, chairman of the House Education Committee. A year ago, SENATE Republicans signaled they wanted to immediately send twice as much to schools for transporting kids to and from school. That plan eventually would have committed about 150-million dollars a year in state money to supplement the budgets for busing in sprawling districts with rural zip codes. Senator Amy Sinclair, a Republican from Allerton, says given current state budget realities, she understands why her G-O-P colleagues in the House favor spending less on school transportation.

“I prefer fixing problems rather than putting band-aids on them, but absolutely I’ll work with them to see if we can get something done that will at least alleviate that stress and help every child receive a high-quality education,” Sinclair says. Sinclair says another bill pending in the legislature could help ease school budgets for busing. The bill would let elementary students ride the bus just as long as high school students — a one-way trip of 75 minutes. One district told legislators with students of any age riding the same bus, two bus ROUTES could be eliminated and save the district 100-thousand dollars next year.

(Radio Iowa)