Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Maine's opportunity to apply for up to $75 million in federal funds is hanging in the balance today.
The state House and Senate can't seem to come to agreement on what shape L.D. 1799 should take. L.D. 1799, of course, is the bill that would strike down Maine's statutory prohibition on using student achievement data in teacher evaluations. That legal barrier needs to come down if Maine wants to take part in the federal Race to the Top competition among the states for billions in federal education reform dollars.
Senators favor an amendment that strips down the legislation, requiring school districts that want to evaluate teachers using student test data to choose from a slate of models pre-approved by a five-member task force with representatives from the Maine Education Association teachers' union and groups representing superintendents, school boards, principals and special education directors.
The Senate approved that last-minute amendment on Monday night, and then House members backed it the next morning. They reversed course later in the day, however, sending the legislation back to the Senate for further review.
Earlier today, the Senate again endorsed the amendment introduced by Sen. Justin Alfond and favored by the state teachers' union. That leaves the bill's fate in the House.
If House members disagree with their Senate colleagues, the bill dies.
The House will take up the legislation later this afternoon after a flurry of lobbying activity on the bill concludes.