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Ortt co-sponsors legislation to repeal gap elimination adjustment

by jmaloni

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Fri, Jan 30th 2015 06:00 pm

State Sen. Robert Ortt, R-C-I-North Tonawanda, is joining the push to fully repeal and eliminate the gap elimination adjustment section of the education law.

Ortt is co-sponsoring the bill introduced by State Sen. Patrick Gallivan, R-C-I-Elma.

The push comes at a crucial time for school districts in New York. Recent reports from the state comptroller's office identified two school districts in the senator's district - Niagara-Wheatfield and Lewiston-Porter - has facing "significant" fiscal stress.

"Getting rid of the GEA will alleviate the gaping budget holes facing school districts across Western New York," Ortt said. "My district has some of the state's most disadvantaged urban and rural areas. It's important to ensure all students are afforded equal opportunities for education. Eliminating the GEA would do just that."

Ortt said the GEA is a leftover from Democrat control of state government. He said it was a back-door budget approach by a Democrat governor, Democrat Assembly and Democrat Senate when the state faced financial difficulties.

"The GEA was passed in 2010 when New York City Democrats ran state government, much to the detriment of upstate and Western New York," Ortt said. "Unfortunately, this measure has been hurting school officials, teachers and children ever since. I promised my constituents I would help overcome this unfair mechanism, and today is an important step in realizing that goal."

The bill would abolish the GEA starting this school year, and provide school districts with the full amount of aid generated by all existing budget funding formulas.

"The GEA has had a devastating impact on school districts across New York state, denying them critical education funding and putting an unfair burden on local taxpayers," Gallivan said. "This reduction in education funding has forced districts to raise taxes, cut classroom staff and eliminate student programs, jeopardizing the quality education every New York child deserves."

The gap elimination adjustment was introduced in 2010 as a way to help close the state's then $10 billion budget deficit.

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