Rep. Ed DeLaney, of Indianapolis, outlined a new fiscal analysis on school funding

As the 2025 legislative session draws nearer, longtime Democratic lawmaker Rep. Ed DeLaney is flagging funding concerns across all Indiana schools ā€” public and private ā€” and called for the next state budget to increase tuition support.

DeLaney, of Indianapolis, made public a new legislative analysis on Wednesday that showed the overall dollar amount spent on K-12 has grown each year but its share of the state budget has dropped.

For instance, tuition support for all school types has grown from $6.2 billion to $8.7 billion from 2011 to 2025.

Dollars sent to Hoosier schools accounted for 44.3% of the Indiana budget in the 2011 fiscal year and rose to 45.3% in 2013. Since then, however, schoolsā€™ budget share has declined to 39.8% and is expected to ā€œremain flatā€ in Fiscal Year 2025, according to the fiscal analysis.

ā€œAs a legislator, Iā€™m very frustrated,ā€ DeLaney said during a Wednesday news briefing. ā€œAs an experienced lawyer, when I argue in favor of public education in the Statehouse, no one argues against it. In principle, no one says, ā€˜Iā€™m against it. Itā€™s not valuable. We donā€™t need it.ā€™ They just donā€™t do it. And in fact, theyā€™ve converted the money.ā€

DeLaney suggested budget writers should primarily focus on a new spending scheme that accounts for a teacher pay minimum boost to $60,000 per year. He said that greater tuition support, generally, would also help schools depend less on referenda and property taxes ā€” and ultimately bring much sought-after relief to homeowners. 

Most importantly, DeLaney continued, student performance will improve, and high school graduates will be more likely to attend college.

The lawmaker said that a sea change will likely require leadership from Indianaā€™s next governor, however.

At ballot boxes next month, Hoosier voters will choose between Republican Sen. Mike Braun ā€” who has suggested the state should restructure, rather than increase, its school spending plan  ā€” and Democratic challenger Jennifer McCormick, who formerly served as Indianaā€™s Secretary of Public Instruction and whose platform calls for additional funding for early education. Both Braun and McCormick have proposed statewide teacher pay raises.

ā€œIf we had a governor who wanted to lead for education, rather than chop away at it or criticize it, it would make a huge difference in the debate within the legislature,ā€ DeLaney said.

How much does Indiana spend on its schools?

When state lawmakers crafted the current two-year state budget during the 2023 sessions, Republicans touted a 5.3% per-student funding increase in the 2024 fiscal year, and another 1.8% jump the following year. The change improved schoolsā€™ tuition support to $8.84 billion for tuition support in 2024 and $9.03 in 2025.

Baked in was more than $1 billion for a major private school voucher expansion, which grew Indianaā€™s Choice Scholarship by 69% the first year and 14% the second year.

Even so, DeLaney said the new fiscal analysis indicates that Indiana is ā€œspending less money on education in all three categories, as a percentage,ā€ referring to earmarks for traditional public, charter and private schools combined. 

 (Graph from the Indiana Legislative Services Agency October 2024 school funding fiscal analysis)

ā€œWe have devalued education, and yes, weā€™ve shifted money to charters and vouchers, but the bottom line is, overall, weā€™re spending less money, and weā€™re producing fewer graduates. So, weā€™ve got the worst of all possible worlds,ā€ DeLaney lamented. ā€œThose who donā€™t like charters should be unhappy. Those who donā€™t like vouchers should be unhappy. But everybody should be unhappy because of this result.ā€

Notably, Indiana spending on Medicaid has also grown during that time. The tab for the 2024-2025 fiscal year came out to $26 billion, including both federal and state dollars. Still, when the 150-member General Assembly meets again in January, theyā€™ll have to address last yearā€™s forecast that missed the mark by nearly $1 billion.

As the proportion of state spending on education has decreased, DeLaney further suggested that property taxpayers have simultaneously been ā€œgouged,ā€ in part because of school referenda.

Data shows that about $2,600 in schoolsā€™ per-student funding came out of local property taxes in 2011. That has since increased to almost $4,000.

ā€œWe need to get serious about that and figure out how to put more state money into our schools in a way that relieves the pressure on property taxes,ā€ DeLaney said. ā€œThe extent that we reduce the need to rely on property taxes ā€” the system is complex ā€” but it could free up money for other purposes, like police, fire, the roads in Indianapolis, whatever else people need.ā€

DeLaney calls for spending boosts

DeLaney said ā€œthere are optionsā€ to accommodate new school spending.

ā€œFor example, the House has understood for years that we could make hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue by taxing cigarettes at a normal level,ā€ he said. ā€œSend that money over to the health side of the budget, freeing up cash for education.ā€

He recommended, too, that the state finance new construction projects ā€” like for buildings on university campuses ā€” rather than paying in cash, which is currently preferable to most Republicans.

ā€œWe can find the money,ā€ DeLaney emphasized.

He said his ā€œnumber one priority would be getting teacher pay up ā€” which we can do.ā€ Currently, the minimum pay for Hoosier educators is set at $40,000.

Recent data shows the average teacher salary in Indiana was $58,531 during the 2022-23 academic year. The lowest teacher salary reported that year was $38,000. The highest was about $108,000.  Total salary costs for all teachers across Indiana totaled more than $3.6 billion during the 2022-23 academic year, per the Indiana Education Employment Relations Board.

Determining how much it will cost the state to increase pay to $60,000 per year will help budget writers land on a specific dollar amount of additional K-12 funding needed in the next budget cycle, DeLaney noted.

ā€œThe main number weā€™ve got to look at, if we could only do one thing ā€” add additional revenue to make sure that teacher pay can go up,ā€ he said. ā€œThe second thing would be to take the pressure off the property taxes for the schools. I donā€™t want our school systems undercut because theyā€™re being forced to overuse the property tax system. Thatā€™s dangerous.ā€

During the most recent 2024 legislative session, budget leader Sen. Ryan Mishler, R-Mishawaka, previewed his own proposal to completely overhaul Indianaā€™s private school vouchers with a grant program that would allow all Hoosier families ā€” regardless of income ā€” to choose where their students get educated.

Although the bill did not advance, discussion at the Statehouse previewed likely legislative momentum in 2025

DeLaney said ā€œthe real fightā€ will likely be around a possible increase to the current tuition value of vouchers, which currently average about $6,000 per student, depending on household size, family income and school district in which a receipt resides.

ā€œThe way to cap the amount is to say that those (with higher household incomes) either donā€™t get a voucher, or they donā€™t get a full voucher,ā€ he said. ā€œMy greatest financial fear is throwing more money at the vouchers while continuing the shrinkage of the overall pot.ā€

+ posts