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WI SB32

WI SB32
Requiring a school board to spend at least 70 percent of its operating expenditures on direct classroom expenditures and annual pay increases for school administrators. (FE)


summary

Introduced
02/12/2025
In Committee
02/12/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires school boards to spend a minimum amount of operating expenditures on direct classroom expenditures and limits annual compensation increases for school administrators. REQUIREMENT TO SPEND 70 PERCENT OF OPERATING EXPENDITURES ON DIRECT CLASSROOM COSTS The bill requires each school board to spend at least 70 percent of its operating expenditures in each school year on direct classroom expenditures. Under the bill, Xdirect classroom expendituresY are expenditures for salaries and benefits of teachers and teacher aides, instructional supplies, tuition, athletic programs, and cocurricular activities. Under the bill, if a school board fails to meet the 70 percent threshold in any school year, the school board must increase the amount spent on direct classroom expenditures by at least 2 percent in each succeeding school year until the 70 percent level is reached. In addition, in the school year following a school year in which a school board fails to meet the 70 percent threshold, the bill directs the LRB-1850/1 FFK:emw 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 32 Department of Public Instruction to reduce the school district[s state aid payments by the difference between what the school board spent on direct classroom expenditures and the minimum that it should have spent on direct classroom expenditures and prohibits the school board from levying additional property taxes to compensate for the reduction. Finally, if the total reduction in state aid and other state payments does not cover a school board[s excess expenditures, DPI must order the school board to reduce the property tax obligations of its taxpayers, including providing refunds to taxpayers who have already paid their annual taxes, by an amount that represents the amount of excess expenditures that have not been recovered through the state aid reductions. LIMITATION ON ANNUAL COMPENSATION INCREASES FOR SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS The bill limits the amount a school board may increase the total compensation paid to a school district administrator, business manager, or school principal, or an assistant to any of those positions (collectively, school administrators), to the average annual percentage increase in total compensation that the school board provided to teachers in the school district. Under current law, the term of a school administrator contract is limited to no more than two years but may provide for additional one year extensions. The pay increase limitation created in the bill first applies to contracts entered into, renewed, or modified on the date the bill becomes law. For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.

AI Summary

This bill establishes two major requirements for school districts in Wisconsin: First, school boards must spend at least 70 percent of their total operating expenditures on "direct classroom expenditures," which are defined as spending on teacher and teacher aide salaries and benefits, instructional supplies, tuition, athletic programs, and co-curricular activities. If a school board fails to meet this 70 percent threshold in any given school year, they must increase their classroom spending by at least 2 percent each subsequent year until they reach the requirement. Additionally, the bill imposes penalties for non-compliance, including state aid reductions and potential property tax refunds. Second, the bill limits annual compensation increases for school administrators (such as district administrators, business managers, and principals) to no more than the average percentage increase provided to teachers in the district. These new rules aim to ensure that more educational funding is directed toward classroom instruction and to control administrative compensation growth. The bill will take effect on July 1, 2026, with some provisions becoming effective immediately after publication, and will apply to new, renewed, or modified administrator contracts from that point forward.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (7)

Last Action

Representative Gustafson added as a cosponsor (on 02/18/2025)

bill text


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