School librarians demonstrate at the Capitol to protest funding cuts

New reduced levy caps cut funding for libraries

WNPA Olympia News Bureau

Seattle Public Schools librarians gathered on the steps of the Capitol building April 2 to protest the lack of funding for schools and their libraries.

Kate Eads is a Seattle Education Association union representative who helped organize the event.

“Our jobs are getting cut in Seattle and our district officials say, ‘Well, it’s because the state doesn’t provide enough money. Go to the state.’ So, we’re here,” Eads said.

The librarians are hoping the state will provide additional funding for libraries in Seattle and across the state; they say funding has been cut because of lowered amounts districts can seek in voter-approved levies.

“When the state capped the levies and said, ‘too bad, Seattle, you don’t get any more,’ it left us out of jobs, literally,” Eads said. “So, we have to close our libraries because our district says we can’t find the money now that there’s no levies.”

The consequences of cutting library funding are frequently library days, meaning a school library is open half-days.

Lawmakers considered raising school levy caps earlier this session from $1.50 to $2.50 with Senate Bill 5313, but the bill has stalled in the Ways and Means Committee. A change in levy rates would mean a change in the amount of funding a school gets in Local Effort Assistance, or levy equalization, which is state funding that ensures schools have a certain dollar amount per student.

The McCleary court decision in 2012 required the Legislature to fully fund “basic education.”

Funding for a full-time library is not considered part of basic education. The Legislature had been found in contempt of court until 2018 when it adopted a plan to put billions of dollars toward K-12 education in coming years.

As a part of the Legislature’s McCleary solution, which raised the state portion of property tax by about 94 cents per $1,000 of assessed value, legislators reduced the school levy cap to its current rate of $1.50 per $1,000 of a property’s assessed value.

In February 2019, Seattle voters approved levies totaling $1.95. However, Seattle Public Schools can only collect $1.50 due to the levy cap. Seattle Public Schools asked for the higher amount in hopes that the Legislature would change the cap.

Librarian Gail Myles says the McCleary fix has made funding “equal but not equitable” for Seattle and many other districts.

The district will only pay for a half-time librarian in middle and high schools next year, leaving it up to individual schools and PTAs to fund libraries, Myles and fellow librarian Paula Wittmann both stated.

“We are considered an extra, even though we shouldn’t be,” Wittmann said. “They say with McCleary [that] it’s fixed but it’s still not amply funded and that’s the paramount duty of the state. These kids are the future and it’s counting on them.”