INDIANAPOLIS — A Democratic state senator says the two-year state budget approved this week devastates many public schools.
Senate Minority Leader Vi Simpson of Bloomington says that the amount of school funding in the budget ignores the reality of fixed costs and inflation that schools face even if they’re losing students.
Simpson wants an intensive study committee to be established to develop a new school funding formula that does not create winners and loser. She says a funding plan is needed that gives every child the same opportunity and treats them with the same respect.
Democratic House Speaker Patrick Bauer of South Bend also wants a study of school funding issues.
Indiana Legislature
State senator calls for school funding study
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Indiana joins right-to-work ranks, governor signs bill
Indiana has become the first Rust Belt state to enact the contentious right-to-work labor law prohibiting labor contracts that require workers to pay union representation fees.
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Indiana Senate approves right-to-work bill
Indiana’s Senate has passed right-to-work legislation, placing the state on the verge of becoming the Rust Belt’s first to enact the contentious labor law.
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Democrats skip Indiana Senate right-to-work hearing
Democratic senators are boycotting an Indiana Senate hearing on the contentious right-to-work bill.
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Indiana legislators OK tougher sex-trafficking law
A bill to toughen Indiana’s penalties for sex trafficking is on its way to Gov. Mitch Daniels for him to sign into law ahead of next weekend’s Super Bowl in Indianapolis.
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Senate bill to help Vigo agency
Legislation drafted to help a local nonprofit passed out of the Indiana State Senate with unanimous support Monday, and is now bound for the House of Representatives.
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Indiana right-to-work foes object to vote’s speed
Opponents of Indiana’s right-to-work bill say Republicans are trying to shut off public debate by rushing the matter through the Legislature within the next week.
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Lawmakers move ahead with welfare drug-testing
Indiana lawmakers are pushing forward on legislation that would cut off cash assistance to welfare recipients who fail drug tests.
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Indiana House approves right-to-work bill
Indiana’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives cleared the way Wednesday to become the first right-to-work state in a traditionally union-heavy Rust Belt increasingly targeted by non-union foes.
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Indiana panel backs teaching cursive writing mandate
Indiana’s public schools would be required to teach cursive writing and largely prohibited from starting their school years until late August under bill approved by a legislative committee.
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UPDATE: Indiana House opens debate on right-to-work vote
Indiana’s House of Representatives is debating the divisive right-to-work measure before possibly clearing the final hurdle.
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Hearing on bill eliminating some licensing abruptly canceled
Union protesters haven’t been able to stop a controversial labor bill in the Indiana Statehouse, but hairdressers may have killed a piece of legislation they loathe.
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Indiana House eyes another $5M for state fair victims
Indiana’s House Ways and Means chairman is pushing for $5 million more for victims of the Indiana State Fair stage collapse and $80 million to pay for full-day kindergarten.
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GOP rejects House Dems’ vote on RTW referendum
Indiana House Democrats walked off the floor Monday after losing an effort to put a right-to-work measure aimed at unions before voters, possibly resuming an off-and-on boycott strategy aimed at derailing the measure for the second straight year.
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Indiana House Dems end third right-to-work boycott
Indiana House Democrats have returned to work after a boycott over divisive right-to-work legislation by moving to strike down the measure.
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Indiana House Dems may end boycott Monday
House Democrats who have been boycotting the session to block a contentious right-to-work bill could return Monday to begin debating the measure, although disagreement over whether a statewide referendum on the issue would be constitutional might delay a vote.
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Labor workers protest Chamber’s right-to-work stance
About 60 union workers, representing seven different unions, protested this morning in front of the Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce while the organization held an educational meeting on right-to-work legislation before the Indiana General Assembly.
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Indiana Democrats continue right-to-work boycott
Indiana legislative leaders today did not appear to be moving toward a resolution of the standstill caused by most House Democrats’ boycott over the contentious right-to-work bill.
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Call for RTW referendum stirs pot
When Republican State Rep. Rich McClain filed a bill last week that called for a referendum vote on the controversial right-to-work issue, he had no idea it might be unconstitutional.
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Indiana House votes for $1,000 fines for missing members
When Indiana House Democrats fled the state last year to stall action on a contentious labor bill, Republicans waited two weeks before docking the missing members’ expense checks.
This time around, they’re not so patient. -
Democrats plan legal challenge to Indiana House fines
Indiana House Democrats say they’ll go to court to challenge the $1,000-a-day fines they face for their legislative boycott over the right-to-work bill.
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Grubb, four other Indiana democrats on House floor for labor bill debate
Indiana House Democrats who failed to show up this morning for a quorum call were hit with a $1,000-a-day fine, but five of their colleagues escaped the punishment.
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Indiana Democrats show no signs of ending boycott
Most Indiana House Democrats aren’t showing signs of ending their boycott over the right-to-work bill despite threats of $1,000-a-day fines.
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Bray announces he will not seek re-election to Senate District 37
State Sen. Richard Bray, R-Martinsville, announced today he will not seek re-election for Senate District 37, which includes areas of Owen, Putnam, Morgan, Clay, Johnson and Monroe counties.
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Bill requiring Indiana stage inspections advances
All outdoor stages in Indiana would have to pass inspections before any performances under a bill approved by a state Senate committee.
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Indiana panel backs bill on right to resist police
An Indiana Senate committee has endorsed a proposal giving state residents limited rights to resist police officers trying to enter their homes.
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Indiana lawmakers consider fines on access violators
Government officials could face fines of up to $500 for blatantly violating Indiana’s public access laws under a proposal that would impose personal penalties for such actions for the first time since the laws were adopted 35 years ago.
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MAUREEN HAYDEN: Let’s be clear on right-to-work’s effects, if that’s even possible
Ball State University economist Michael Hicks describes himself as a fiscal conservative and admirer of much of what Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels has done in his seven years in office.
But last week, Hicks released a research study that isn’t going over well with Daniels’ allies in the Statehouse pushing a contentious piece of legislation known as the right-to-work bill. -
UPDATE: Indiana Democrats: Voters should decide right-to-work
Indiana House Democrats want voters to decide the fate of a right-to-work bill or else they’ll continue stall tactics designed to derail the contentious legislation, the House minority leader said today.
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Indiana county leaders worried over 911 funding
Indiana county officials who are scrambling to find enough money to pay for 911 emergency services say they aren’t confident of help from lawmakers who might be leery of allowing increased cellphone fees during an election year.
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Indiana legislators consider basketball tourney bill
The Indiana High School Athletics Association is opposing a state Senate proposal aimed at forcing a return of the state’s old single-class basketball tournament.
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Indiana joins right-to-work ranks, governor signs bill








