Tampabay.com
MARCH 18, 2008

Class-size proposal gets one more chance

A proposal to scale back the 2002 class-size amendment to school-wide averages, rather than classroom counts, almost died Monday at the Florida Taxation and Budget Reform meeting.

Almost.

Facing certain defeat with a 15-10 vote against putting the amendment to the amendment before voters in November, the concept got new life when former state Senate president Jim Scott changed his position at the last minute. Smith's move was tactical, the AP reports, in hopes of finding a compromise that all might accept.

The decision got pushed off to March 26.

The idea before the commission is nothing new. Lawmakers have tried
unsuccessfully to do it since 2003. That's what prompted sponsor
Roberto Martinez, a member of the State Board of Education, to push it
in the commission, which needs only 17 votes to put an issue on the
ballot (compared to majorities in the House and Senate).

"There is no way one can change the constitution through legislation," said Martinez, a Miami lawyer. "It just cannot be done."

Many education groups support the proposal, saying they need to have
flexibility in implementing the class sizes that voters approved. "What
we have is a good amendment, but it just needs adjustment," Bill
Montford, executive director of the Florida Association of District
Schools Superintendents, told the Tallahassee Democrat.

One possible flaw in the argument: Voters really like the class-size amendment. A St. Petersburg Times
February poll of 702 registered voters showed 74 percent favored the
mandate, and just 30 percent supported changing from classroom counts
to school-wide averages, with 51 percent unsure. (More on that here.)

Just in case, lawmakers continue to move ahead with a statutory "fix"
that would allow schools some wiggle room if the dreaded "19th student"
arrives at their doors.

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Gradebook features education articles and insights on schools in Florida, focusing on Tampa Bay area schools. What's the latest from the Florida Department of Education? How is the FCAT being used to compare Florida schools? What's going in on in Tampa Bay schools? Get an insider's view from the Times education reporting team.

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Rebecca Catalanello covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail her: rcatalanello@tampabay.com.

Tony Marrero covers Hernando County schools. E-mail him: tmarrero@tampabay.com.

Marlene Sokol covers Hillsborough County schools. E-mail her: sokol@tampabay.com.

Ron Matus covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail him: matus@tampabay.com.

Jeffrey S. Solochek covers Pasco County schools. E-mail him: solochek@tampabay.com.

Kim Wilmath covers the University of South Florida. E-mail her: kwilmath@tampabay.com.

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