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Louisiana House OKs 3.2% K-12 Boost for Teachers, Rural Schools

May 3, 2026

BATON ROUGE — The Louisiana House Education Committee advanced a budget proposal Tuesday boosting K-12 education funding by 3.2% for fiscal year 2026-2027, prioritizing teacher salaries and infrastructure repairs in rural districts. Initially reported by the Louisiana Illuminator, the plan counters a broader Minimum Foundation Program (MFP) continuation budget of $4.067 billion — down $199.12 million from the prior year's $4.266 billion executive operating budget — with $3.775 billion from state general funds.

Key allocations include salary increases to combat Louisiana's teacher shortage, where starting pay lags national averages by over $10,000, and grants for school buses and facilities in parishes like Vernon and Morehouse, where aging buildings threaten safety. "This is about keeping our best educators in classrooms from Shreveport to Lafayette," said Rep. Edmond Jordan, D-Baton Rouge, committee vice chair, during debate. The proposal aligns with Gov. Jeff Landry's education priorities, though full funding hinges on legislative appropriations.

Companion efforts underscore momentum: Senate Bill 27 by Sen. Patrick McMath, R-Ruston, allocates $15.2 million in general funds for high-dosage tutoring to boost post-pandemic recovery, particularly in Title I schools serving low-income students in New Orleans and rural areas. Meanwhile, House Bill 1027 proposes a Free School Breakfast Program, mandating the Department of Education to fund one free breakfast per student daily for participating districts, maximizing federal reimbursements while requiring no-cost meals.

As bills pend in the House Education Committee, stakeholders from the Louisiana Association of Educators urge swift passage before the 2026 Regular Session adjourns. Rural superintendents, facing bus shortages stranding students in flood-prone areas like St. Landry Parish, warn delays could derail the academic year starting August 2026.

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