Wyoming Board OKs $15M Boost for Rural Schools, Teacher Retention
CHEYENNE — The Wyoming State Board of Education approved $15 million in new funding Thursday to bolster facilities and teacher retention in the state's most underfunded rural school districts, according to initial reports from Wyo.gov. The allocation targets improvements like building repairs and incentives to stem teacher turnover in areas where small enrollments strain budgets. Officials say the excess funding exceeds prior commitments by about $15 million, providing a rare surplus for the first time in memory.
This board action aligns with Senate File 81, a sweeping K-12 finance recalibration bill passed by the Wyoming Legislature in March 2026 and awaiting Gov. Mark Gordon's signature. The Senate amended the bill to add $127.1 million across two years, including mandates for a minimum of 17 teachers in small districts, new elective positions in career-technical education and band at junior highs, and immediate funding for elementary nurses and counselors. Total appropriations under SF 81 reach $242 million from the Public School Foundation Program account.
Rural districts, from Fremont County's Wind River to Sheridan County's small-town schools, will see direct relief amid ongoing challenges like Northern Colorado School District's projected $15 million shortfall by 2027, prompting closure votes. Sen. Chris Rothfuss, D-Laramie, highlighted the amendments' focus on equity during Senate debate, noting boosts for teacher pay and adjusted enrollment metrics despite slightly larger class sizes. The funding recalibration, debated in January Select Committee meetings, builds on a $12 million base increase partially appropriated last year.
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