152 local elected officials representing over 70 cities and towns and 45 different school districts around New Hampshire signed this letter calling for comprehensive school funding reform to be a priority during the ongoing state budget making process. This letter was delivered to the House Finance Committee during its public hearings for the State Budget, which was held on March 13 at 2pm. The letter was submitted exactly as depicted below.

March 13, 2023

To Governor Sununu and the General Court of New Hampshire:

Two years ago, a group of over 80 local leaders – including Mayors, City Councilors, Select Board members, and School Board members – requested that the State of New Hampshire make changes to its education funding system in order to address well-known inequities and gaps. Over the past two years, we have worked hard for our schools and communities to provide the best education possible for our students while balancing the economic realities of our taxpayers. 

During that same time, the State continued to avoid its constitutional responsibility to provide adequate education to New Hampshire students. The current state budget – passed in 2021 – continued to downshift costs onto local towns and cities. The budget removed targeted property tax relief directed towards communities with lower property values and high taxes, in favor of tax cuts that benefited wealthier communities more than those with higher levels of need. Meanwhile, the State has seen years of record surplus, indicating that additional funds exist to implement these needed changes. Education funding in New Hampshire continues to be inequitable. Lawmakers have allowed for a decrease in education funding year after year, contributing to increases in property taxes across many communities throughout New Hampshire. Currently, lawmakers in Concord are working on the state budget. This is the single most significant vehicle for addressing this problem and we once again call on the New Hampshire Legislature and Governor to act.

There is a significant gap between the actual cost of education and what the State has determined to be adequate. The average cost to educate one student for a whole year is about $20,000, however the State only provides, on average, approximately $4,700 per student. Local property tax payers must make up the difference, resulting in large variability in tax rates and the quality of education provided. Communities that struggle to raise money for their schools are the communities that are forced to increase their tax rates the most. Unsurprisingly, in its final report, the Commission to Study School Funding found that the “current public school funding system should be reformed to include increased state budget funds that are directed to communities that have greater student needs, which will also result in greater taxpayer equity by reducing disproportionate burdens on poorer towns.”

As determined by numerous New Hampshire Supreme Court rulings, the State has a constitutional duty to fund public education. However, decades of inaction and cost-downshifting onto towns and cities by the State have disproportionately forced local taxpayers to pick up the tab for education. According to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, New Hampshire has the lowest percentage of state funding for public education of any state in the country, resulting in local property tax payers being forced to bear over 70% of the total cost of public education, far exceeding the national average of 44.5%.

The work of the Commission to Study School Funding is still fresh, yet none of the findings or suggestions of the commission have been incorporated into how our state funds education. The commission’s major findings point to a regressive education funding system that utilizes inaccurate funding models, provides fewer resources to communities with higher needs, and consequently produces lower educational outcomes for those communities. Just recently, New Hampshire received another “F” from the Education Law Center on how well it distributes state funds to schools with high levels of students experiencing poverty. The framework of solutions proposed within the commission’s final report would result in property tax relief for the vast majority of local taxpayers. The solutions would also improve outcomes for many high-need students by not only providing more education funding to almost all school districts, but by specifically aiding districts that serve students with greater needs. 

It is once again the strongly held belief of those signed below that strong, well-funded public education is the most important asset for the future of New Hampshire and its citizens. With about 90% of New Hampshire children attending public schools, the lack of investment from the State not only harms local taxpayers, but also the vast majority of our children. We believe that the State of New Hampshire needs to invest in the future of this state and its students by incorporating the recommendations from the Commission to Study School Funding into the state budget process. 

Addressing these inequities could finally bring the State of New Hampshire into compliance with the multitude of education funding decisions issued by the New Hampshire Supreme Court in the decades since the first Claremont ruling in 1993. The continued failure to shift the burden of public education off the shoulders of local property taxpayers has resulted in multiple on-going lawsuits against the State of New Hampshire. These lawsuits are challenging not only how much money the State pays towns and cities in adequate education funding, but also how that money is raised. Regardless of the outcomes of these lawsuits, the responsibility to address the funding disparities remains in the hands of the New Hampshire Legislature and Governor. 

As with any system or structure that has been left unrepaired and unmaintained for decades, the efforts required to resolve the issues at hand will need to be substantial and intensive. But it doesn’t mean it will be harmful to the wallets of Granite Staters. Modeling done by the American Institute of Research for the Commission to Study School Funding found that if the State were to take responsibility for the bulk of education funding, “70% of towns would see a reduction in property tax rates.” The cost savings for most New Hampshire taxpayers, however, should not be the only reason for acting on this issue. These changes are necessary for the long-term success of New Hampshire’s public schools and students. 

Through the current state budget process, the Legislature and Governor have an opportunity to fix these problems to ensure that students in every school district in New Hampshire have access to the best possible public education, while also providing real property tax relief to taxpayers in every corner of the state. By fulfilling its constitutional responsibility to fund education, the State will address the present economic realities and hardships faced by many of our neighbors, while investing in our students and the future of New Hampshire. 

Signed,

Kris Bellerose, School Board Vice Chair, Allenstown

Andrea Campbell, School Board, Bedford

Joe Boutin, School Board Chair, Benton

Dwight Swauger, School Board, Benton

Paul Grenier, Mayor, Berlin

Diana Berthiaume, City Council, Berlin

Mark Eastman, City Council, Berlin

Peter Higbee, City Council, Berlin

Peter Morency, City Council, Berlin

Denise Morgan, City Council, Berlin

Lucie Remillard, City Council, Berlin

Robert Theberge, City Council, Berlin

Roland Theberge, City Council, Berlin

Eamon Kelley, School Board, Berlin

Nathan Morin, School Board, Berlin

Ann Nolin, School Board Chair, Berlin

Lorrie Carey, Select Board Chair, Boscawen

Jon Morgan, Select Board, Brentwood

Len Fleischer, School Board, Chesterfield

Dale Girard, Mayor, Claremont

Debora Matteau, Assistant Mayor, Claremont

Matt Mooshian, City Council, Claremont

Bob Cotton, School Board, Concord

Sarah Robinson, School Board, Concord

Jonathan Weinberg, School Board, Concord

Stacey Brown, City Council, Concord

Zandra Rice Hawkins, City Council, Concord

Evelyn Flynn, School Board, Dalton

Brenda Willis, School Board, Derry

Robert Carrier, Mayor, Dover

Dennis Shanahan, Deputy Mayor, Dover

Michelle Clancy, School Board, Dover

Micaela Demeter, School Board, Dover

Maggie Fogarty, School Board, Dover

Carolyn Mebert, School Board Chair, Dover

Jessica Rozzo, School Board Vice Chair, Dover

Robin Trefethen, School Board, Dover

Debra Hackett, City Council, Dover

Robert Hinkel, City Council, Dover

Linnea Nemeth, City Council, Dover

Lindsey Williams, City Council, Dover

Carden Welsh, Town Council, Durham

Nancy Belanger, Select Board, Exeter

Molly Cowan, Select Board Vice Chair, Exeter

Dawn Bullens, School Board Chair, Exeter Elementary

Kimberly Masucci Meyerr, School Board, Exeter Regional Cooperative

Helen Joyce, School Board Chair, Exeter Regional Cooperative

Ami Faria, Budget Committee Chair, Exeter Regional Cooperative

Jo Brown, Mayor, Franklin

Deborah Brown, School Board, Franklin

Delaney Carrier, School Board Vice Chair, Franklin

Laurie Cass, School Board, Franklin

Liz Cote, School Board, Franklin

Timothy Dow, School Board Chair, Franklin

Christie Martin, School Board, Franklin

Olivia Zink, City Council, Franklin

Kelly Boyer, Select Board Vice Chair, Goffstown

Shane Rozamus, School Board, Goffstown

Melanie Renfrew-Hebert, Budget Committee, Goffstown

Jason Giard, School Board Vice Chair, Hampstead

Megan Malcolm, School Board, Hampstead

Erin Pellegrini, School Board, Hapmstead

David Smith, School Board Chair, Hampstead

Steve Morse, Select Board Vice Chair, Hampstead

Sean Murphy, Select Board Chair, Hampstead

Laurie Warnock, Select Board, Hampstead

Maurice Worthen Jr, Select Board, Hampstead

Anthony Daniels, School Board, Haverhill

Aaron Palm, School Board, Haverhill

David Robinson, School Board Chair, Haverhill

Chris Bober, School Board Chair, Hillsboro-Deering

Michael Kenney, School Board, Hillsboro-Deering

Andrea Folsom, School Board Chair, Hopkinton

Norm Goupil, School Board, Hopkinton

Rob Nadeau, School Board Vice Chair, Hopkinton

Kenneth Traum, Select Board Vice Chair, Hopkinton

Daisy Hawlk, School Board, Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative

John McCarthy, School Board Chair, Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative

Lisa Wiley, School Board, Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative

Emma Bates, School Board, Kearsarge Regional

Bebe Casey, School Board, Kearsarge Regional

Mike Giacomo, City Council Vice Chair, Keene

Gladys Johnsen, City Council, Keene

Bobby Williams, City Council, Keene

Andrew Hosmer, Mayor, Laconia

Tony Felch, City Council, Laconia

Katrin Kasper, Select Board Vice Chair, Lee

Arthur Boutin, Select Board & School Board, Lisbon

Vincent Berk, School Board, Lyme

Jennifer Boylston, School Board Vice Chair, Lyme

Hayes Greenway, School Board, Lyme

Joyce Craig, Mayor, Manchester

Peter Argeropoulos, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Jason Bonilla, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Nicole Leapley, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Peter Perich, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Chris Potter, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Karen Soule, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Julie Turner, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Leslie Want, Board of School Committee, Manchester

Christine Fajardo, Board of Aldermen, Manchester

Patrick Long, Board of Aldermen Chair and State Representative, Manchester

Will Stewart, Board of Aldermen, Manchester

Tim Josephson, School Board Chair, Mascoma Valley Regional

Hope Stragnell, School Board, Mascoma Valley Regional

Lorrie Carey, School Board, Merrimack Valley

Seelye Longnecker, School Board Chair, Merrimack Valley

Jessica Wheeler Russell, School Board, Merrimack Valley

Laura Vincent, School Board, Merrimack Valley

Kenneth Lee Dube, Select Board, Milan

Randy Fortin, Select Board Chair, Milan

Jim Donchess, Mayor, Nashua

Lori Wilshire, Board of Aldermen President, Nashua

Regan Lamphier, Board of Education, Nashua

Janet Kidder, Select Board, New London

Dominic Halle, School Board, Newfound Area

James Burroughs, Select Board, Newport

Barry Connell, Select Board Vice Chair, Newport

Jeffrey Kessler, Select Board Chair, Newport

Keith Sayer, Select Board, Newport

Herbert Tellor, Select Board, Newport

Stacy Driscoll, School Board, Pembroke

David Doherty, Budget Committee, Pembroke

Sarah Marston Duval, School Board, Pittsfield

Matthew Pappas, School Board, Rochester

Alexander de Geofroy, City Council, Rochester

Ashley Desrochers, City Council, Rochester

Dana Hilliard, Mayor, Somersworth

David Witham, Deputy Mayor, Somersworth

Donald Austin, City Council, Somersworth

Nancie Cameron, City Council, Somersworth

Matthew Gerding, City Council, Somersworth

Robert Gibson,  City Council, Somersworth

Denis Messier, City Council, Somersworth

Richard Michaud, City Council, Somersworth

Kari Clark, School Board, Somersworth

Maggie Larson, School Board Chair, Somersworth

Mark Richardson, School Board, Somersworth

Barbara Wentworth, School Board, Somersworth

Lisa Davenport, School Board Vice Chair, Stoddard

Alfrieda Englund, School Board Chair, Stoddard

Jesse Tyler, School Board Chair, Sunapee

Laura Botelho, School Board, Washington

Christine Heath, School Board Chair, Weare

William Politt, School Board, Weare

Alyssa Small, School Board, Weare

Kevin Cahill, Select Board, Weare

Stephanie Clark, School Board Vice Chair, Wentworth

Lauren Youngs, School Board Chair, Wentworth

Robert Loiacono, School Board Chair, White Mountains Regional

Kristen van Bergen-Buteau, School Board, White Mountains Regional

 

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