News

NC Lawmakers Could Soon Pass A Huge Emergency Education Bill. Here’s What Might Change.

NC lawmakers consider a full slate of public school waivers with coronavirus closures set to linger into mid-May.

(Image via Shutterstock)

North Carolina lawmakers on an emergency COVID-19 committee will consider a full slate of education waivers, including waivers for a planned reduction in early grade class sizes, testing, teacher and administrator performance reviews, low-performing schools and a controversial school takeover program called the Innovative School District.

Legislators put an omnibus draft bill before the panel Thursday afternoon, with plans for revisions in the coming days.ย ย ย 

โ€œIt will be comprehensive. It will be the result of everyone having had time to review the proposals, the explanations,โ€ the committee’s co-chair, Rep. Craig Horn, a Union County Republican, said Thursday.

Horn encouraged lawmakers on the specially convened committee to bring forward their local district concerns as the bill is readied. 

But with schools in all 115 public school districts closed with no sign of a return in sight, Horn added that the committee has yet to take up calendar flexibility. Calendar flexibility will be a key discussion as lawmakers weigh the benefits of ongoing remote learning against the loss of classroom time.ย 

NC Gov. Roy Cooper ordered all schools closed until May 15 and issued a statewide stay-at-home order that is set to expire at the end of April. But itโ€™s possible, likely even, that both orders could be extended.

โ€œIt is incredibly complex,โ€ Horn said of the calendar issue, noting that the panel is reviewing the latest info from federal officials and Cooperโ€™s office.ย 

A quick round-up of other legislative news:

  • At least one Democrat, Greensboro Rep. Cecil Brockman, asked if lawmakers were prepping a plan for teacher raises, noting discussions were ongoing on this front prior to the pandemic.ย  โ€œEspecially with whatโ€™s going on, we need to be working on a deal,โ€ Brockman said. However, committee leadership indicated that the panel was tasked with focusing its efforts on responding to novel coronavirus-related concerns.ย 
  • Waivers for class size reductions will be particularly important for school districts. Democrats and Republicans warred over the GOPโ€™s mandated class size cuts in recent years. Democrats said Republicans were seeking smaller classes, but werenโ€™t budgeting enough to pay for it. GOP leadership stepped back on their initial orders after a wave of criticism from educators and school districts.ย 
  • Rep. Hugh Blackwell, a Burke County Republican, said legislators should be, if they are not already, communicating with Gov. Cooper over his plans for $95 million in emergency K-12 cash from the federal government.ย 

Categories:

Authors

  • Billy Ball is Cardinal & Pine’s senior newsletter editor. Heโ€™s covered local, state, and national politics, government, education, criminal justice, the environment, and immigration in North Carolina for almost two decades. His reporting and commentary have earned state, regional, and national awards. He’s also the founder of The Living South, a journalism project about the most interesting people in the American South.

    Have a story tip? Reach Billy at billy@couriernewsroom.com. For local reporting that connects the dots, from policy to people, sign up for Billyโ€™s newsletter.