Community Corner
Agency Blasts State's Cuts to Ledyard's Education Funding
Town officials were informed recently that the amount of money they receive from the state for education costs is being cut.

by Jack Kramer
Correspondent
LEDYARD, CT - Having to deal with broken funding promises from the state is something towns, such as Ledyard, are used to.
Find out what's happening in Ledyardfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
But the organization that is in charge of looking out for town like Ledyard’s interests - the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities - says enough is enough.
Ledyard will have to come up with another $78,861 it hadn’t anticipated to help the state balance the 2017 budget.
Find out what's happening in Ledyardfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Ledyard was slated to receive $12.05 million in education funding from the state for 2017. It is now being told in a letter it received this week it will receive $78,861 less – or $11.97 million.
CCM Executive Director Joe DeLong said the state is passing on problems it should be taking care of unfairly to towns like Ledyard.
“One thing we do not agree with is the categorization of education spending as municipal aid,” said DeLong. “Education is the state’s responsibility.”
“Having said that, we are more than willing to work with the state to find a fair and equitable funding formula when it comes to education funding” continued DeLong. “The problem with the current funding allocations is they aren’t real. The numbers change - they aren’t predictable.”
Image via Shutterstock.
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