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Kansas Gov Signs School Funding Bills Boosting Equity Ahead of Veto Session

National Desk
May 2, 2026
TOPEKA, Kansas — Gov. Laura Kelly signed multiple education-related bills into law on April 14, 2026, just ahead of the legislative veto session, expanding public school funding and resources across the state. The package includes enhancements to the school finance formula, special education state aid and budget audits for districts, responding to ongoing debates over education equity first highlighted by the Topeka Capital-Journal.[1] Kansas State Department of Education officials noted the bills target core funding mechanisms, with base per-pupil aid projected at $5,782 for fiscal year 2027 — a 3% increase based on November consensus estimates.[4] Special education emerges as a flashpoint, where districts shoulder roughly $400 million in local funding to bridge state aid shortfalls, equivalent to about $1,400 less per pupil in base state aid.[4] Discussions in the House K-12 Education Budget Committee on Jan. 22, 2026, revealed requests for $92.2 million in state general fund enhancements for fiscal year 2027 special education aid, aiming to raise excess cost coverage to 77.4% from current levels below 92% as mandated by statute.[2] Appropriations under Senate Bill 125, adopted in 2025, form the baseline at $5.1 billion in state general funds, with total agency requests reaching $6.8 billion including federal aid like $14.9 million in unspent ARPA funds.[2] The signed measures also reinstate grants such as a $15 million allocation — up from prior $5 million levels — to fully fund requested state aid for qualifying programs in fiscal year 2025, alongside $500,000 for a 10% state match in federal programs and $7,500 for the Military Interstate Children's Compact Commission.[2] While separate bills like SB 75, SB 87 and SB 386 propose tax credits for non-public school options and low-income scholarships, they remain pending in committees and do not alter the core public funding expansions.[3][5][6] Districts in rural areas like those in western Kansas stand to gain most from the formula tweaks, easing pressures from enrollment declines and inflation.

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