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School funds at their limit, Pawlenty says

01/18/2008





Associated Press | January 17, 2008


Gov. Tim Pawlenty is signaling there won't be much new education money coming out of this year's legislative session.

Pawlenty addressed the Minnesota School Boards Association on Thursday morning. He didn't offer the group much in the way of new initiatives or pledges of per-student funding increases.

Later, the Republican governor told reporters that last year's school funding increase was one of the largest boosts in modern history. He said the $800 million increase in K-12 education spending will probably be it for this budget cycle.

"When you have an economy that is slowing down and we just gave the schools a total state increase over a two-year period that was about 8 percent," Pawlenty said. "That's a reasonable increase. I think that's the amount of increase they're going to get during this two-year period."

Pawlenty also took questions from high school journalists. He told them he would resist efforts to end Minnesota's participation in the federal No Child Left Behind law.

Several Republican and Democratic lawmakers want Minnesota to stop abiding by the law, which places a heavy emphasis on student testing in reading, math and science.