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Bill > SB828


WI SB828

WI SB828
Grants for students enrolled in teacher education programs, school district revenue limits, the reimbursement rate for special education costs, and making an appropriation. (FE)


summary

Introduced
01/15/2026
In Committee
01/15/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

SCHOOL DISTRICT REVENUE LIMITS Current law generally limits the total amount of revenue per pupil that a school district may receive from general school aids and property taxes in a school year to the amount of revenue allowed per pupil in the previous school year plus a LRB-5780/1 FFK&ARG:cdc&emw 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 828 per pupil adjustment, if any, as provided by law. Until 2425, current law provides a $325 per pupil adjustment in each school year. Under the bill, beginning in the 2026-27 school year, the per pupil adjustment is the per pupil increase for the previous school year as adjusted for any increase in the consumer price index. REIMBURSEMENT FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION COSTS The bill also changes the rate at which the state reimburses school boards, operators of independent charter schools, cooperative educational service agencies (CESAs), and county children with disabilities education boards (CCDEBs) for costs incurred to provide special education and related services to children with disabilities and for school age parents programs (eligible costs). Under current law, the state reimburses the full cost of special education for children in hospitals and convalescent homes for orthopedically disabled children. After those costs are paid, the state reimburses remaining eligible costs from the amount remaining in the appropriation account at a rate that distributes the full amount appropriated. The Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimates that the reimbursement rate will be 42 percent in the 2025-26 school year and 45 percent in the 2026-27 school year. The bill changes the appropriation to a sum sufficient and provides that, beginning in the 2025-26 school year, after full payment of hospital and convalescent home costs, the remaining costs are reimbursed at 90 percent of eligible costs. Currently, the Department of Public Instruction provides 1) special education aid to school districts, independent charter schools, CESAs, and CCDEBs; 2) aid to school districts, CESAs, and CCDEBs for providing physical or mental health treatment services to private school and tribal school pupils; and 3) aid for school age parents programs to school districts only. TEACHER PREPARATORY PROGRAM GRANT PROGRAM Finally, the bill creates a grant program administered by the Higher Educational Aids Board under which HEAB awards grants to students enrolled in the teacher preparatory program of an institution of higher education. Grant moneys may be used to pay 1) the student’s tuition and fees and 2) any expense incurred in connection with obtaining a license to teach issued by the Department of Public Instruction, including any examination or licensing fee. However, the grant amount for the payment of tuition and fees is limited to the amount of tuition and segregated fees charged to a resident undergraduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for an equivalent program. HEAB also may not award a grant to a student unless the student enters into a written agreement to work in this state as a teacher in an elementary or secondary school for at least four years after receiving a bachelor’s degree. For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill. LRB-5780/1 FFK&ARG:cdc&emw 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 828

AI Summary

This bill makes several changes to Wisconsin education law, including modifying how school districts' revenue limits are calculated, increasing the state's reimbursement rate for special education costs, and establishing a new grant program for aspiring teachers. Starting in the 2026-27 school year, school districts' revenue limits will be adjusted based on the previous year's per-pupil increase plus inflation, rather than a fixed amount. For special education services, the state will now reimburse 90% of eligible costs, excluding those for children in hospitals and convalescent homes, which will continue to be fully reimbursed, beginning in the 2025-26 school year. Additionally, the bill creates a grant program administered by the Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB) to help students enrolled in teacher education programs pay for tuition, fees, and licensing expenses, with the condition that recipients must agree to teach in Wisconsin for at least four years after graduation.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (27)

Last Action

Fiscal estimate received (on 02/24/2026)

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