by James A. Bacon
You’d think that with K-12 enrollment declining, the overall cost of educating Virginia’s children might start declining as well. The number of school-age children is sliding down a long slope (see graph above), and there is no indication that the exodus of 44,000 or so pupils during the COVID pandemic to private schools and home schools is about to reverse itself. Yet In his proposed biennial budget (fiscal years 2026 and 2027), Governor Glenn Youngkin asked for $600 million more, bringing the two-year total to $22 billion.
And Senate Democrats say it’s not nearly enough.
The latest argument is over how much more money to spend for “support staff” — school nurses, school social workers, school counselors, bus drivers, custodians. In other words, people who don’t actually teach. For that chunk of the biennial budget, the General Assembly budget crafted by Democrats wants to add $223 million more. Youngkin wants to dial the number down to a $85 million increase.
โWeโre talking about … folks who keep our schools running,โ Sen. Jennifer Carroll Foy, D-Prince William, told 8News.













