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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Teacher Group says: “Keep School Budget Reserve Issue in Perspective”

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Wednesday, January 9, 2008   

Pierre, SD – The state's largest teacher organization hopes South Dakota residents will keep Governor Mike Round's remarks about school budget reserves in perspective. The governor recently criticized districts for increasing their budget reserves instead of teacher pay, but educators say there's another side to the story.

The ongoing controversy over school district reserves surfaced again Tuesday during Rounds' annual message to lawmakers. He was critical of school districts for growing budget reserves instead of earmarking the money for teacher salaries. But Donna DeKraai, president of the South Dakota Education Association, says there seems to be a misunderstanding about how the budget reserves work.

The disagreement dates back a few years to a time when schools were receiving only one-time funding amounts from the state, DeKraai explains. For that reason, districts were reluctant to funnel money into teacher salaries out of fear it would not be available the next year.

"We've seen fuel and capital expenses continually increase. School districts do need to make sure that they have a general fund balance that they can spend on the expenses that increase higher than sometimes what they're getting as far as funding. They have to be very careful about it."

DeKraai says increasing educator salaries is crucial, too, but lawmakers should ensure that school districts are fiscally sound when they do it.

"Education as a whole needs to be a priority. Public education is where our students are, and that will lead us into the future. So funding will be our number one priority, again, for SDEA and, I'm sure, all the other education entities out there."

DeKraai notes that, compared to other states, South Dakota's teacher pay remains "dead last" in the nation.





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