Montana Schools Face a Bigger Problem Than the New Pay Law

Montana, USA, Kalispell,Tue Jun 23 2026
Montana’s new teacher‑pay plan helped raise salaries for fresh hires, but it did not fix the deeper budget issue. The state has long under‑funded public schools, especially when student numbers drop. Most of the money still comes from enrollment counts, even though many costs stay the same or rise. When schools lose students, they still need principals, buses, technology and maintenance. Because of this mismatch, districts lose revenue faster than they cut expenses. Inflation and people’s reluctance to raise property taxes add more strain. So schools must choose between paying teachers, fixing buildings or buying new tech with the same limited money. The new law made Montana less embarrassed about low starting pay, which helps attract teachers. It did not change the overall funding formula or how money is shared across districts.
Now some boards are debating whether to give all teachers the same raise or keep a pay gap for experience. These debates happen in a system that forces tough choices because there isn’t enough money to cover everything. Critics can argue about the exact distribution of raises, but they cannot ignore that the underlying budget problem remains. The law’s main lesson is that the floor—minimum teacher pay—was too low, not that the ceiling was raised. The real issue is a funding system that relies on falling enrollment, lags behind true costs and depends on voters to approve higher taxes. When districts like Kalispell decide how to spread a new pay budget, they are acting within the limits set by state policy. Their choices show that more money is needed, not that the new law failed. Montana’s schools need a stronger funding formula that reflects real costs and reduces the burden on local taxpayers.
https://localnews.ai/article/montana-schools-face-a-bigger-problem-than-the-new-pay-law-8d607055

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