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Despite rough economy, school spending climbs in Illinois

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(MCT) — The cost of educating public school students in Illinois continues to go up in the face of a struggling economy that has forced teacher layoffs and led to cuts in state education aid, new state data show.

Per-pupil spending for 2010-11 stands at $11,664 statewide, with a handful of districts now spending more than $25,000 per child. Average teacher salaries are $66,614, while the average administrator makes $110,870.

In 2007, per-pupil spending was $9,488; the average teacher salary was $58,275 and the average administrator salary was $102,301.

The figures come from the annual Illinois School Report Card, which is being released Wednesday. The report card highlights results on state achievement tests but also provides parents and the public key financial information about school districts, from how much they spend per student to how much, on average, teachers and administrators earn, and whether districts are spending more than they take in.

School district officials say increases in spending are tied to several factors, including multiyear teacher contracts with built-in raises, some of which were signed before the economy went south and the state fell behind on sending millions of dollars to districts.

Even when the state doesn't come through, districts have to keep paying their bills, which keep going up, said Michael Jacoby, a former school superintendent who is now executive director of the Illinois Association of School Business Officials.

"Insurance costs continue to rise. ... There's been inflation on supplies and materials, utility costs have gone up. Basically it is just like any normal household — the cost of living continues to increase," Jacoby said.

Some districts had to dip into reserves or make cuts in other areas to keep up with those expenses as well as obligations in teacher contracts, he said.

Critics say school districts are overspending at taxpayer expense.

"We've been saying all along that all these cries of poverty in education are nothing but cries for more revenue," said John Tillman, CEO of the fiscally conservative Illinois Policy Institute.

Per-pupil figures are a broad measure of district spending because they encompass money for teacher and administrator salaries, supplies, building maintenance, transportation and a host of other operating expenses. By and large, teacher and staff salaries make up the biggest part of school district budgets.

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