Baton Rouge. Louisiana lawmakers approved Gov. Jeff Landry's executive order this week to redirect $168 million from the state's K‑12 funding formula to provide one-year stipends of $2,000 for teachers and $1,000 for qualifying support staff; both chambers recorded supermajority votes on the measure on June 24. The vote follows voters rejecting a May ballot measure to finance permanent raises, and the action has been temporarily blocked by a state court this week; lawmakers said they expect recommendations from the MFP task force and that legal and budget reviews will determine whether and how the stipends are implemented in coming weeks.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The $168 million fund diversion could affect your child's school resources. It also impacts teachers and support staff, who may be in your family or circle. Check how your local school district plans to manage this shift.
This move is a temporary solution to a long-term issue: teacher pay. It's not yet clear if the stipends will be implemented, as it's under legal review. Keep an eye on updates from the MFP task force. Worth forwarding if you know educators or parents in Louisiana.
Teachers and eligible support staff received one-year payments of $2,000 and $1,000 respectively, funded by reallocating $168 million from public school budgets.
Public schools and students will face approximately $168 million in reduced funding, representing about a 5% cut to state education spending that could affect local budgets and programs.
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Louisiana lawmakers approve fund diversion for teacher stipends
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