Sen. Sal DiDomenico and his colleagues in the Massachusetts Senate recently passed a $41.49 billion budget for Fiscal Year 2019, including targeted investments to create opportunities and ensure access to the tools that individuals, children and families need to succeed in the economy and in their communities.
This budget invests in key areas related to education, local aid, health and human services, housing, and tools for low income families.
“After careful deliberation, the Senate has passed a thoughtful budget that both reflects the shared priorities of our chamber and addresses the pressing needs of our communities,” said DiDomenico, Assistant Majority Leader of the Massachusetts Senate. “This budget includes key investments in many of my top priority items that will have a positive and direct impact on Everett, and I am happy to report that all of my amendments providing additional resources for our community were adopted to the final Senate budget. I would like to thank Senate Ways and Means Chairwoman Karen Spilka and Senate President Harriette Chandler for all of their great work to craft a budget that will undoubtedly help to move our entire Commonwealth forward.”
The budget invests significantly in education for people of all ages and backgrounds and focuses particularly on elementary and secondary education, including $4.91 billion for the Chapter 70 education formula, its highest level ever. This funding allows for a minimum aid increase of $30 per pupil for every school district across the state and 100 percent effort reduction to bring all school districts to their target local contribution.
Additionally, this budget takes much needed steps to offset the cost to some school districts-like Everett and Chelsea- of educating economically disadvantaged students and allows these districts to more accurately count their students. In recent years, many Gateway City school districts have faced dire budget gaps due to a 2015 change in the way the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) calculates low-income or “economically disadvantaged” students. This count plays a key role in the Chapter 70 formula that determines the amount of funding school districts receive from the state.
As a result of this change, only students who are registered for social welfare programs like SNAP and Medicaid are categorized as economically disadvantaged, excluding thousands of additional low-income students who are not accessing social services. However, under the Senate budget, communities will be allowed to choose their preferred method of counting economically disadvantaged students, thereby ensuring that Everett is able to count all of its students.
“I am thrilled that this change has been included in the FY19 Senate budget,” said DiDomenico. “This is a solution that I have long been advocating for, and I am confident this will have a major impact on the amount of Chapter 70 funding schools in my district will receive and will go a long way towards remedying the fiscal challenges that our local schools have been facing.”
As Assistant Majority Leader of the Senate, DiDomenico was able to secure a number of amendments providing additional funding for his local communities. In total, the Senator secured an additional $375,000 for the Everett community:
- $75,000 for a youth social worker in the Everett Public Schools.
- $75,000 to support music programming in the Everett Public Schools.
- $50,000 for access to technology for Everett students.
- $50,000 for a Museum of Science Engineering Program in Everett and Cambridge.
- $50,000 for upgrades to the Appleton Street Park in Everett.
- $75,000 for Cambridge Health Alliance to increase access to office-based opioid treatment services in Everett.
This budget also invests in programs and advances policies to encourage self-sufficiency and economic mobility for low income families, providing them with the tools to secure their essential needs and develop skills to join the workforce. Policy changes include:
- Sen. DiDomenico’s bill to eliminate the family cap – a failed and outdated policy that denies Department of Transitional Assistance benefits to children conceived while the family was receiving assistance.
- An increase in the child clothing allowance to $350 per child – a $50 per child increase over FY18- to help families secure their basic needs
- An increase in the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) state match to 30 percent of the federal credit.
Other top priority items for Sen. DiDomenico that were included in the Fiscal Year 2019 Senate Budget and will benefit Everett residents are:
- $3.8 million for the state’s pediatric palliative care network to ensure there is no wait list for these critical services so children and their families have the extra care and support that they need;
- $319.3 million to fully fund the Special Education Circuit Breaker;
- $100 million to reimburse school districts for costs incurred when students leave to attend charter schools;
- $8.7 million for Childcare Resource and Referral Centers to boost salaries and decrease caseloads for caseworkers helping parents, childcare providers, employers and community groups navigate the state’s early education landscape;
- $4 million for Youth-At-Risk Matching grants, including support for YWCAs, YMCAs and Boys & Girls Clubs;
- $33.4 million for adult basic education services to improve access to skills and tools necessary to join the workforce;
- $10.3 million for summer jobs and work-readiness training for at-risk youth;
- $16 million for the Massachusetts Cultural Council to support local arts, culture and creative economy initiatives;
- $16.2 million for local Councils on Aging to strengthen programs and services in senior centers in communities across the state;
- $142.9 million for a range of substance abuse treatment, intervention and recovery support services, including funding to open five new recovery centers; and
- $18.5 million for Residential Assistance for Families in Transition (RAFT), including $3 million to expand eligibility to include persons with disabilities, seniors, unaccompanied youth and individuals.
A Conference Committee will now work out the differences between the Senate budget and the version passed by the House of Representatives in April.
Fiscal Year 2019 begins on July 1, 2018.