Michigan Legislature approves $126M school spending bill
Michigan schools could be getting an extra $126 million for school safety efforts next fiscal year, on top of what was originally planned. That’s under a spending bill passed in the state Legislature Wednesday.
The additional spending is to make up for cuts to per-pupil mental health and school safety grants that had been made in the original version of the state’s fiscal year 2024-2025 schools budget that passed this summer.
Under the state’s current budget, for fiscal year 2023-2024, the grants received $328 million between restricted and general fund dollars. The new budget had slashed that number to $25 million in ongoing school aid funding and $1.5 million in one-time funding.
Democratic state Rep. Regina Weiss (D-Oak Park) said that was because federal money that had supported the program was running out.
“It was always a priority, especially of House Democrats, to make sure that we were doing everything that we could to find additional dollars. So, we worked all summer and were able to find a fund that was underutilized that we could lapse early that freed up funding,” she said Wednesday.
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