This holiday season, lawmakers need to prioritize the gift of ensuring Kentucky kids and teacher can be at their best

dom • December 4, 2023

Kentucky Association of School Superintendents announces 2024 legislative priorities

It’s the time of year when we gather with those we love to celebrate the holiday season. We’ll fill our plates with the foods we grew up with and conversations often will turn to fond memories of yesteryear. Adults will give a glance or two at the “kids table” remembering when they sat there.

When you make your New Year’s resolutions, make one more. Promise now to reach out to your legislator on behalf of Kentucky’s children, teachers and school staff. Your voice matters.

Together, we can make a difference. Join the Kentucky Association of School Superintendents as we urge lawmakers to help us to shape a prosperous Kentucky built on an accountability system that is meaningful and useful to all learners. We ask you to support legislation that centers on these priorities:

Focus on Kentucky Public Education Funding

Kentucky public schools remain chronically underfunded. From student transportation to school safety needs, lawmakers need to make sure that Kentucky students, teachers and staff can be at their best in and outside the classroom. To that effect, the Kentucky Association of School Superintendents is calling on the 2024 Kentucky General Assembly to:

  1. Improve SEEK Funding – the current formula is below the 2008 level (indexed for inflation).
  2. Fully fund student transportation and full-day kindergarten -transportation funding remains below the 2008 level (indexed for inflation).
  3. Guarantee schools have the resources to hire state-mandated student resource officers and mental health professionals.

Recruit & Retain High-Quality Teachers & Staff to Combat a Teacher Crisis

Kentucky public schools are facing a teaching and staffing crisis. Across the Commonwealth, people are exiting the teaching profession or choosing to forgo a career in public education all together. Kentucky needs to:

  1. Institute competitive pay standards for Kentucky teachers and support staff.
  2. Increase professional development opportunities and “learn to earn” apprenticeship pathways for current and aspiring educators.
  3. Identify the education career pathway as a high demand work sector.

Unleash Lifelong Learning

The future is now. Growing the economy is dependent on ensuring generations of Kentucky kids develop into the next generation of leaders. To make it happen, Kentucky elected officials should:

  1. Create more opportunities for innovative programs and more choice options in public schools. 
  2. Tailor education needs around every child in every county across the Commonwealth so that they are ready to succeed at school, home and in the workplace.
  3. Provide more flexible certification options to empower educators to better meet the needs of their students, especially in science and math.

These priorities reflect what our educators and school staff should expect and the very least Kentucky children deserve.

The Kentucky legislature will begin its 2024 session on Tuesday, January 2 and will meet for 60 days. During that time, we’ll be calling on our state lawmakers to put the children of the Commonwealth first and encourage you to do the same. To learn more, visit https://kidsfirstky.com/.

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Dr. Brad Johnson recently posted a statistic that stopped me: one in three teachers say they're likely to leave the profession within the next two years. It lingered, not because it's shocking, but because it feels remarkably real. I've spent years sitting across from superintendents who started conversations trying to solve an instructional problem and ended them talking about the challenges of filling teaching positions and other vacancies, and how many teachers they may lose at the end of the year. I've heard veterans say, quietly, that they wouldn't choose this again. I've watched districts do everything right and still lose people, not to other professions, but to exhaustion. That's not anecdote. That's pattern. And in Kentucky, the data confirms what those conversations already told us. According to the Kentucky Department of Education's October 2025 Educator Shortage Report, 80% of Kentucky's public school districts began this school year with unfilled positions - a total of 2,421 vacancies statewide. That figure, while still striking, actually represents improvement: the previous year, only a single district in the entire Commonwealth started fully staffed. Progress is real. But 140 districts still began this school year short, three-quarters reported a decrease in qualified applicants over the past two years, and 401 emergency certificates have already been issued for this year alone. Meanwhile, Kentucky's reliance on alternative certification pathways has nearly tripled since 2016, rising from roughly 1,200 to more than 3,000 placements annually. Proficiency-based certifications, which didn't exist here eight years ago, now account for nearly 370 placements per year. These aren't signs of a system expanding its options. They're signs of a system under strain, reaching for whatever it can find. And the reach is costly. Superintendents across Kentucky describe a consistent pattern with alternative-certified placements: higher onboarding and training investments, greater likelihood of mid-year resignations that leave classrooms unstable, elevated absenteeism that drives up substitute costs, more frequent discipline challenges, and - most importantly - measurable learning consequences for students. This is not a reflection on the individuals stepping into these roles. Many are doing genuinely courageous work under difficult conditions, often entering classrooms mid-year, in the most challenging assignments, without the full preparation they deserved. The problem isn't their effort. It's the conditions the system has created, for them and for the students they're trying to serve. When a system chronically fills seats instead of building a profession, the costs don't disappear. 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It's clarity. Meanwhile, the job itself has intensified. Students arrive carrying more - academically, socially, emotionally. Communities navigate economic strain and social fragmentation. Public discourse has grown louder and sharper. And the distance between a classroom decision and a public reaction has compressed to almost nothing. Through all of this, compensation has not kept pace with inflation, support staffing has not scaled with student complexity, and expectations have expanded without parallel redesign. We have added weight without reinforcing the structure. But pipelines shrink when people look ahead and decide the destination isn't sustainable - when they calculate student debt against starting salaries and watch how educators are treated in a culture that criticizes the profession from every direction while asking more of it every year. At some point, the question stops being naive: Will this system care for me the way I'm asked to care for others? If we answer that question with nostalgia instead of reform, we will lose them. Not slowly. All at once. This is not simply a teacher issue. It is a workforce issue, an economic stability issue, a community resilience issue. Schools are the backbone of local workforce development — they prepare the talent pipeline for every other sector. But that backbone is under strain, and the numbers make that undeniable. Here is what makes this moment both urgent and clarifying: we know what stabilization requires, and we know what it costs. Kentucky school districts are operating with 26% less purchasing power than they had in 2008. That erosion isn't abstract - it shows up in salary schedules that can't compete with the private sector, transportation budgets that drain classroom dollars, and funding gaps that compound year after year regardless of how efficiently districts manage them. We aren't asking for expansion. We’re asking for restoration. That restoration has a name and a path. The KASS Big Three - a meaningful increase to the SEEK base funding formula, full funding of pupil transportation using accurate prior year data, and raising Tier I to 20% - represent the highest-impact recurring revenue investments available to Kentucky's policymakers. Together, they provide what no workforce strategy can succeed without: predictable, sustainable revenue aligned to real and rising costs. SEEK base increases are the primary vehicle for competitive educator compensation. Full transportation funding ends the forced diversion of classroom dollars to cover buses and fuel. And Tier I equity investments ensure that every district, regardless of local wealth, can compete for the talent their students deserve. And compensation is more than a salary line. For decades, competitive health insurance and retirement benefits anchored the education workforce's value proposition - offsetting salary gaps with the private sector and giving dedicated professionals a reason to stay. Proposals that erode those benefits don't just affect take-home pay. They eliminate the last competitive argument available to districts that can't win a salary bidding war. Beyond funding, stabilizing the workforce requires a modern accountability system that develops educators rather than simply measuring them, and a genuine investment in the pipeline itself through apprenticeship pathways, loan forgiveness, induction support, and a public narrative that treats education as the in-demand career sector it has been recognized to be. Passion cannot substitute for infrastructure. A career in education was never meant to require martyrdom to prove commitment. The next generation is telling us something important: they will serve, but not at any cost. The question before us isn't whether young educators care enough. It never was. The question is whether we are willing to invest in and redesign the system enough to deserve them. If we are, we won't just stabilize a profession. 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