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Legislature to return Wednesday afternoon with light education load - Idaho EdNews

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As the Legislature returns to the Statehouse Wednesday, its education policymaking may be all but wrapped for the session.

Some of the hottest debates over education bills – around school budgets and indoctrination in the classroom – have been settled after Gov. Brad Little Monday signed budget bills funding K-12 teacher salaries and public universities. Those two bills were major sticking points that stalled the end the now record-long session.

Gov. Brad Little

The look of the session’s waning days — or hours — could depend on Little. He has signed all but one in a batch of bills and resolutions the Legislature passed before recessing last week, including four bills trimming his own executive power. The one outlier: a divisive property tax reform bill that he must sign, veto or allow to become law by default by 10:30 a.m. Wednesday morning.

That leaves a pair of education decisions that lawmakers could weigh Wednesday — or not. A federal early education grant totaling nearly $6 million has languished on the House’s agenda for weeks without getting a vote, though it could theoretically be taken up if House leadership chooses.

An attempt to reject a minor State Department of Education rule change dealing with school attendance and enrollment could move through the House, too, but it also has remained untouched on the chamber’s docket for weeks.

If the Legislature decides to break this week, though, its departure from Boise may not be final. A resolution that Majority Caucus Chair Megan Blanksma, R-Hammett, has called a “ticket out” of the session could extend the session until as late as Sept. 1. The Legislature would recess without per diem, allowing it to reconvene without Little’s approval, a move Blanksma said will allow lawmakers to make changes in response to the anticipated release of U.S. Census data this summer.

As of 8 a.m. today, only one committee has a Wednesday meeting scheduled, lending little obvious sign of much last-second legislation. The Joint-Finance Appropriations Committee, composed half of senators and half of House members, is set to meet at the same time as the Senate, 1 p.m. The committee will take up two budgets related to the state’s permanent building fund and federal money for Idaho cities.

The House is scheduled to meet at 3 p.m.

Blake Jones

About Blake Jones

Reporter Blake Jones covers the politics and policy of Idaho's K-12 public school system. He's a lifelong Idahoan, and holds degrees in Creative Writing and Political Economy from the College of Idaho. Follow Blake on Twitter @jonesblakej. He can be reached by email at [email protected]

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