State Rep. Robert Cupp |
State Rep. Rick Carfagna |
While I had some reservations about the plan -- namely its equity and some basic calculations -- it is undoubtedly the best school funding plan to come around in over a decade and would put us in a much better school funding place than we are today.
The plan had significant legislative support, but never from Householder, who was (correctly) concerned about the plan's equity.
So does this mean the Cupp-Patterson could soon rise from the ashes if Cupp is sitting in the Lincoln Chair?
Before you get too excited, Cupp isn't the only rumored name out there. Another is State Rep. Rick Carfagna. I don't know what he knows about K-12 funding, but I worked with him on the state's higher education budget last cycle, and I came away impressed.
He listens.
He learns.
He spent several meetings trying to educate the higher education subcommittee on finance (which he chairs) about how higher education funding works -- not an easy task.
While he wouldn't have the instant, deep knowledge of school funding that Cupp does (the state's district profile report that outlines data for every school district in the state bears his name), I'm sure Carfagna would be willing to listen to the school funding needs of this state.
Just not sure it would happen this year.
As for Cupp, his choice would be very interesting. If he's picked, one way the House could begin to put the Householder mess behind them is to pass the Cupp-Patterson education reform plan. Do something Householder was opposed to (for the right reasons, I might add, but still...) while doing something big and bold for kids and families.
It would certainly change the topic.
The plan's fate in the Senate is less certain.
But passing the Cupp Patterson plan through the House (it's already had tons of hearings) would be a major step forward for education funding in this state. And who better to push it through than one of the plan's namesakes?
Oh yeah. There's one final complication.
Cupp took $24,000 from First Energy.
Carfagna?
$0.
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