As a member of the House of Representative’s Education Committee, I was privileged to hear hours of testimony over the past several months from moms and dads, teachers and administrators, mayors and town managers, other representatives and organizational lobbyists.

Uncharacteristically, they were all singing the same refrain. New Hampshire’s education funding formula is out of date, detrimental to many communities, disproportionately more painful (financially) to poorer towns and a tremendous burden on local taxpayers via their property taxes.

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