Keeping Kids First: Advancing Education in Kentucky Through Legislative Action

January 31, 2025

Keeping Kids First: Advancing Education in Kentucky Through Legislative Action

The Kids First KY Legislative Agenda was built around three pillars:  unleash lifelong learning in every classroom for every student, recruit and retain high quality public school teachers and staff, and a focus on Kentucky public education funding that allows us to achieve the first two.  Recent legislative sessions, including 2024, produced significant progress towards each of these goals and showed that when elected officials and school leaders work together, we can advance shared goals and elevate the quality of education across the Commonwealth.


We have seen significant steps to unleash learning in every classroom for every student with the passing of the Read to Succeed (2022) and Numeracy Counts Act (2024) to focus on fundamental priorities as well as providing some funding to begin implementation.  In addition, the legislature continued to fund the Dolly Parton Imagination Library and Dual Credit Scholarships as well as establishing funding for school resource officers.  Safe schools enable greater learning for every student.  These measures will have a lasting impact on students across Kentucky. 


The 2024 session also enabled significant progress towards recruiting and retaining high quality public school teachers and staff.  We believe every classroom deserves a high quality teacher.  Every school deserves a high quality principal.  And every district deserves a high quality superintendent.  To that end, the legislature continued to fully fund (and provide even greater investments) in the ARC for the TRS and MITF (retiree health insurance & shared responsibility) as well as funding educator health insurance, creating student teacher stipends and educator scholarships, and allocating funding through SEEK to give local districts the authority to provide raises for staff. 


The 2024 budget policy was a positive step forward for our schools.  Included in that budget was an increase to SEEK in both years of the biennial budget, adjusting the Tier 1 rate to address disparities in school district funding, increasing transportation funding, continued funding of full-day kindergarten, and codifying and funding CTE programs and facilities.  With the loss of significant federal dollars, the decision to fund our schools enabled local school districts to maintain a steady financial footing as stewards of taxpayer dollars.


The Kentucky Association of School Superintendents are grateful for these steps and celebrate the work we were able to accomplish, together, with our legislators.  While progress has been made, our three pillars remain the same, and even with only 24 days left in this legislative session before concurrence, there is still much we can accomplish together.  Over the next few weeks, the focus with our legislators will include:


Unleash Lifelong Learning

  • Build momentum for the need and possibilities for a new accountability system aligned with the Kentucky United We Learn Framework
  • Study and make recommendations to identify outdated, redundant, and/or unnecessary mandates imposed on schools and districts
  • Continue to support and fund the Read to Succeed and Numeracy Counts Act
  • Improve homeschool provider qualifications and eligibility requirements to include a “stay-put” provision prohibiting homeschool enrollment for students in truancy or pending disciplinary issues


Recruit and Retain High Quality Public School Teachers and Staff

  • Support EPSB with reviewing and reforming certification limits to broaden options for schools and districts to maximize the talents of their teachers to meet the needs of their students. (eg. K-8, 6-12 certs) Consider changes to the gatekeepers of certification to provide multiple paths to demonstrate competencies for earning certification (“weed in” vs. “weed out”)
  • Align educator professional development requirements with educator contracts to emphasize job-embedded training and personalized learning to enhance instructional and leadership capacities. 
  • Support a “grassroots campaign” through educator rising chapters in every middle school, high school and education preparation program in the state including a robust slate of student activities to cultivate their knowledge and interest in the education career pathway.
  • Continue to explore ways to build the education pipeline for the long term


A Focus on Kentucky Public Education Funding

  • Closing the SEEK shortfall to ensure the budget cycle and long-term planning continues for school districts across Kentucky.
  • Improve school facility construction funding and administration process, namely to codify the construction administration provisions passed in HB727 of 2024 that reduced redundancies and enhanced efficiency
  • Requiring a fiscal note of financial impact statement for every education bill to ensure we have no unfunded mandates.
  • Fix the language in the budget bill to ensure districts can be reimbursed for all SRO’s and ensure safe schools for every student


At KASS, we believe deeply in our state motto, “United we Stand, Divided we Fall.”  We have shown what happens when we come together to truly put Kids First - our students, our schools, our districts, and our communities have the ability to thrive.  There is still much work to do but now is the time for us to continue doing that work.  Our children and future generations deserve nothing less.


February 20, 2026
A provision in the House budget proposal would place a cap on the state’s contribution toward employee health insurance premiums. Based on projections shared by the Personnel Cabinet, that cap could shift substantial premium growth to employees over the next biennium. For Kentucky’s public schools, this is not simply a budget line item. It is a workforce strategy issue with long-term implications for staffing stability and student outcomes. The Foundation at Risk Public education has always competed for talent on total compensation — salary plus benefits. When salaries lagged behind the private sector, strong health insurance and retirement benefits sustained the education workforce for decades. Recent legislative investments began restoring salary competitiveness. That progress is measurable. More districts are fully staffed than in prior years, and momentum has been building. The proposed changes to the health insurance cap change that equation. If benefit costs rise significantly for employees, districts risk losing both the salary progress recently achieved and the long-standing benefits advantage that helped sustain the workforce during leaner years. The Personnel Impact According to projections referenced in statewide discussions: Premium increases could reach up to 78 percent. Teachers could see reductions in real take-home pay of approximately $5,832 per year. Bus drivers could lose roughly $6,420 annually. Additional impacts include higher deductibles and reduced coverage. When a teacher receives a raise but pays more in premiums, total compensation declines. From a workforce standpoint, that erases recent progress. Three Compounding Consequences This shift creates three compounding consequences for Kentucky’s public schools: 1. The Profession Loses Its Competitive Case For decades, education could tell prospective employees: salaries may lag, but benefits are strong and retirement is secure. Recent investments allowed districts to add that salary competitiveness was improving. If take-home pay declines, both arguments weaken at once. Recruitment becomes harder. Retention becomes less certain. 2. Classified Staff Lose a Primary Reason to Stay Bus drivers, food service workers, paraeducators, and custodians have historically accepted lower hourly wages in exchange for quality health coverage. Significant premium increases tip the balance. When classified roles go unfilled, districts face immediate operational challenges — transportation routes, meal service, and facility operations all depend on stable staffing. 3. Local Communities Bear Unequal Burden When total compensation declines, communities face pressure to respond locally. Property-wealthy districts may have some flexibility. Property-poor districts, many of which are already near practical tax limits, often do not. Workforce instability will not distribute evenly. It will disproportionately affect the communities least equipped to absorb it. T he Big Three Alignment Question The House budget proposal also includes continued investment in SEEK, transportation funding, and Tier I — the “Big Three” pillars designed to support competitive compensation and expand access to opportunity. Those investments reflect a commitment to strengthening Kentucky’s public education system. However, if benefit costs simultaneously reduce take-home pay, the workforce strategy those investments are intended to support becomes more difficult to sustain. You cannot recruit with one hand and create net financial loss with the other. Budget provisions must align. A Superintendent-Centered Perspective Superintendents understand fiscal responsibility. District leaders make difficult budget decisions every year, balancing sustainability with workforce investment. The question is not whether health care costs are rising. The question is how those costs are distributed and what consequences follow. Workforce stability is not peripheral to student success. It is foundational. Schools rise or fall on the quality and consistency of the adults serving students. Moving Forward As the budget process continues, clarity and alignment matter. Districts need: Accurate projections Clear implementation guidance Budget alignment that supports total compensation stability KASS will continue to provide superintendent-centered analysis focused on operational consequence and workforce sustainability. Kentucky’s public schools depend on talented educators and staff. Policy decisions affecting compensation structures should be evaluated not only in fiscal terms, but in terms of long-term workforce strength and student success.
February 15, 2026
In a recent KASS Live episode, KHSAA Commissioner Julian Tackett addressed the growing complexity surrounding high school athletics in Kentucky. From transfer eligibility under open enrollment to NIL guardrails and mid-season movement, the pressures facing districts are increasingly operational and immediate. Tackett emphasized that the KHSAA’s responsibility is consistent rule application grounded in member-approved policy, while superintendents remain central to maintaining fairness, clarity, and community trust when eligibility questions arise. The conversation also underscored the importance of safety, supervision, and partnership. Whether addressing fan conduct, officiating shortages, or compliance concerns, athletics reflect district leadership and school culture. With clear communication and steady collaboration between districts and the KHSAA, superintendents can protect student opportunity while preserving competitive integrity and public confidence. 👉 Watch the full conversation with Julian Tackett
February 15, 2026
When education funding debates move into budget season, conversations often revolve around line items, percentages, and projections. For district superintendents, however, the implications are far more tangible. They are measured in teacher salaries, bus replacement schedules, classroom resources, and student services. This session’s budget conversation centers heavily on recurring revenue through the SEEK formula. While multiple targeted investments are under discussion, the clearest message emerging is the importance of the SEEK base and its connection to district stability. Why the SEEK Base Matters The SEEK base is not simply a number in statute. It is the primary recurring funding mechanism that districts rely on for sustainable planning. When the base increases meaningfully, districts gain the ability to invest in instruction, remain competitive in staff compensation, and address long-term workforce challenges. When it remains flat, the pressure shifts locally. Over time, districts have experienced diminished buying power relative to 2008 levels. Inflationary pressures and rising operational costs continue to compound that challenge. Without recurring revenue growth, districts absorb those increases within fixed budgets. The result is not theoretical. It is operational. A Local Example: Rockcastle County Schools A funding impact report shared this week illustrates how these pressures manifest at the district level . On page 1 of the report, Rockcastle County Schools documents a 26 percent decrease in purchasing power compared to 2008. Bus replacement costs increased significantly, with a single bus rising from $97,115 in 2021 to $154,702 in 2026. The district will purchase four buses at a total cost of $618,808. Insurance costs tell a similar story. General and property insurance increased from $168,977 in 2020 to $467,555 in 2025 . Instructional curriculum now totals $1.2 million annually, and even a limited Chromebook replacement cycle at select grade 0 levels requires $300,000 plus additional charger Y . These are not optional expenses. They are core operational realities. Transportation and Instructional Tradeoffs On page 3 of the same report, Rockcastle details the transportation impact specifically . Fully funding SEEK transportation using prior-year spring data would provide $413,906, nearly funding three of the four buses needed for the upcoming year. Over a ten-year period, the district estimates a $7,040,240 deficit resulting from transportation not being fully funded . When transportation funding falls short, districts must redirect general fund dollars to close the gap. That shift carries instructional consequences: delayed salary adjustments, postponed program investments, and limited capacity to address workforce shortages. Superintendents presenting to budget committees emphasized this dynamic clearly. One district reported being funded at roughly 74 percent of actual transportation cost, requiring approximately $900,000 to be covered locally. The instructional opportunity cost of that gap is real. Tier I and Geographic Equity The third recurring revenue lever under discussion is Tier I equalization. An increase from 17.5 percent toward 20 percent has been referenced as a way to strengthen equity across districts with varying property wealth. As described in the Rockcastle report on page 4 , recurring SEEK funding supports: Expanded mental health services Special education and intervention staffing School resource officers Student services such as counseling and food access Cost-of-living salary increases Rising instructional programming costs These needs do not fluctuate annually. They are ongoing, and they require stable funding. The Power of Telling the Story The most effective advocacy this week did not rely on abstract percentages. It relied on district-level numbers and clearly articulated tradeoffs. Transportation funded at 71 to 74 percent. Four buses costing over $600,000. Insurance increases of nearly $300,000 in five years. A decade-long transportation deficit exceeding $7 million. These details shift the conversation from policy theory to district consequence. Legislators consistently respond to local impact framed through data and student outcomes. When superintendents connect SEEK base increases to competitive salaries, to workforce retention along border states, to expanded mental health supports, the budget conversation becomes grounded in operational reality. Recurring Revenue Is the Stability Strategy Targeted investments have value. School safety, induction programs, and principal mentoring initiatives all matter. But recurring revenue remains the foundation. The SEEK base, fully funded transportation using current data, and equitable Tier I adjustments represent structural stability. They allow districts to plan beyond a single fiscal year. They protect classroom resources from operational volatility. They restore balance between state and local funding responsibility. At the center of this discussion is not a formula. It is stewardship. District leaders are tasked with protecting instructional quality, sustaining safe environments, and maintaining public trust. Recurring revenue allows them to do that with foresight rather than reaction. Moving Forward Budget negotiations will continue to evolve. Early signals suggest interest in raising the SEEK base and improving transportation funding. Final outcomes will depend on continued engagement and clear communication from district leaders. The most effective approach remains consistent: Present the numbers. Connect them to instruction. Explain the consequence of inaction. Reinforce the long-term return on investment. As the Rockcastle report concludes, the return on investment is not abstract. It is the future leaders of Kentucky communities . In this budget cycle, the SEEK base is more than a funding mechanism. It is the clearest signal of the Commonwealth’s commitment to sustaining strong, stable, and future-ready public schools.
February 8, 2026
The Purpose Behind Synergy
February 8, 2026
In the KASS Live session with John Nash, superintendents were invited into a nuanced discussion about how generative AI is shaping the educational landscape and what it means for district leadership. Nash, Associate Professor of Educational Leadership Studies at the University of Kentucky and founding director of the Laboratory on Design Thinking, offered a grounded framework for understanding AI beyond hype and anxiety. He emphasized that the integration of AI should be deliberate, anchored in clear leadership goals and centered on supporting educators and learners rather than replacing essential human judgment. Throughout the conversation, Nash connected the promise of emerging technologies with enduring leadership principles — trust, reflection, and purpose. Rather than presenting AI as a side project or compliance task, he encouraged superintendents to consider how these tools might support problem-solving, instructional innovation, and operational clarity across their districts. His perspective reminded leaders that the essence of their role remains unchanged even as the tools evolve: guide people toward meaningful outcomes and keep students at the center of every decision. 👉 Watch the full conversation with John Nash
February 8, 2026
In this KASS Live episode, Beau Barnes — Deputy Executive Secretary of Operations and General Counsel for the Teachers’ Retirement System of Kentucky (TRS) — brought superintendents into a frank conversation about the health and future of the statewide retirement system that supports Kentucky’s educators. Barnes discussed the role of sustained investment, governance integrity, and transparent communication in ensuring that TRS remains a stable and dependable benefit for teachers and administrators alike. His insights underscored that secure and well-governed retirement systems are essential to recruiting and retaining high-quality staff across districts. Barnes also highlighted how reforms and strategic planning within TRS intersect with broader district priorities, from workforce stability to long-range financial forecasting. His discussion aimed to demystify complex pension topics and frame them in terms that district leaders can incorporate into their planning conversations. Rather than an abstract financial challenge, TRS became a lens through which superintendents could examine how retirement policy and operational decisions affect district morale, long-term hiring strategies, and community confidence in public education as a career pathway. 👉 Watch the full conversation with Beau Barnes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0VgqkixoaAU&list=PL-5C6cZuwEFLtZQLLGV_A3n__fBWYWk6V&index=2
More Posts