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Board hears legislative funding update, flags cuts to teaching-and-learning program

February 28, 2026 | Canyons School District, School Boards, Utah


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Board hears legislative funding update, flags cuts to teaching-and-learning program
Leon Wilcox, Canyons School District’s business administrator, told trustees on March 3 that several bills moving through the Legislature would change how the district receives state education funds and could reduce discretionary supports the district counts on.

"They are gonna pull back the whole $18,300,000 of DTL," Wilcox said, referring to the statewide teaching-and-learning line; "our share is about $850,000." He added that the district is watching a proposed change to the educator salary adjustment that would index increases to the lower of the prior-year WPU or the consumer price index, a change Wilcox said would reduce that amount by roughly 4.89 percent.

Why it matters: the board was briefed on several items that affect local budgets—changes to salary indexing, shifts in how counselors are funded, and other line-item adjustments that affect school programs and staffing. Wilcox noted small but meaningful reductions to student health and counseling funding (about 1.29% statewide) and a transportation reduction that would cost the district roughly $300,000.

Trustees asked for details about several bills. Wilcox highlighted Senate Bill 65, which the legislative council (JLC) opposed and which would redirect some property-tax flows through the county to the state for short intervals; he said the change could affect local cash timing and interest. Wilcox also summarized House Bill 236 (truth-in-taxation scheduling changes) and Senate Bill 164 (school construction language), noting amendments intended to leave oversight of construction in districts with licensed coordinators.

Board context: trustees thanked the district legislative team for advocacy and said they would continue monitoring bills through the session’s end. Wilcox said some items had passed one chamber but remained uncertain, and he asked the board to expect follow-up as lawmakers complete final actions.

What’s next: administration will return with updated revenue estimates and any required budget adjustments after the Legislature adjourns.

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