What is B.E.S.T.?

Building Excellent Schools Today (BEST).

I found the information below on the Colorado State Education site.

Established in 2008 with the signing of HB08-1335, BEST provides an annual amount of funding, in the form of competitive grants, to school districts, charter schools, institute charter schools, boards of cooperative educational services and the Colorado school for the deaf and the blind.  BEST funds can be used for the construction of new schools as well as general construction and renovation of existing school facility systems and structures.

The Problem: Crumbling Schools

Every day across Colorado, parents send their children to unsafe schools. Our schools are aging. Kids are going to school in 100-year-old buildings.

In many cases, replacing buildings would be cheaper than paying for ongoing repairs, replacements, and quick fixes.

Schools have failing roofs, broken boilers, asbestos contamination, structural problems, inadequate fire safety systems, inadequate water treatment systems, faulty electric, and pest infestation.

A 2003 State Auditor’s Office report estimated the statewide need at $4.7 billion – and that was four years ago.

This is a statewide problem and cannot be solved by local school districts alone.

Almost half of Colorado’s school districts (more than 80 of 178) do not have the tax base to build a single, new school.

Poor, rural districts have the greatest needs.

Fast-growing districts across the state receive hundreds of new students each year and cannot keep pace. They cannot raise local dollars for new school buildings.

Some districts have nearly half of their students in trailers and Quonset huts. For many, temporary facilities have become a permanent solution.

The Solution: The BEST Plan: Building Excellent Schools Today

BEST is a $1 billion plan to repair and rebuild Colorado’s crumbling schools.

We can fix this problem without new state taxes or fees by putting existing assets to their highest and best use.

The BEST Plan will dedicate a part of the School Land Trust revenues to school capital construction to repair and rebuild Colorado’s schools. $30-$40 million annually will leverage about $500 million today. With a matching portion from school districts, the BEST Program would put the total investment in schools at nearly $1 billion, enough to build scores of new schools or repair hundreds of existing ones.

The School Land Trust encompasses three million acres of Colorado’s land. The federal government gave this asset to the school children of Colorado in 1876, exclusively for the support of the state’s K-12 public schools.

Colorado can dedicate revenues from the School Land Trust for K-12 capital construction. Revenues include mineral lease revenues and royalties, rents, and interest. Revenues from the School Land Trust have grown significantly in recent years as mineral and commercial developments have expanded. Revenues have grown from almost $57 million annually in 2004 to over $90 million next year.

BEST: Background Information

Many neighboring states use school trust lands to support school capital:

Washington dedicates all of the income from their School Trust Lands to their state school capital program (whose budget is $950 million for the current two-year biennium).

Arizona uses income earned from their School Trust Lands to repay bonds used for school buildings, these funds have contributed to the $2.5 billion the state has invested in K-12 school buildings since 1999.

Wyoming has dedicated $1.9 billion for K-12 capital since 2002 including a portion of royalty payments from School Trust Lands.

Montana uses a portion of the state’s mineral royalties from School Trust Lands to fund school capital projects.

How BEST will prioritize funding:

The first step for the BEST Program will be to conduct a statewide assessment of the health and safety needs of our schools.

Once that assessment is done, grants will be awarded based on a few guiding principles:

Meeting health and safety standards. Helping poor, rural districts that have the oldest infrastructure. Building 21st century schools throughout Colorado

HB08-1335 created the Building Excellent Schools Today program. The program provides state money to fund repair, renovation, and construction for the public pre-kindergarten through twelfth-grade schools across the state. In order to fund a portion of the BEST awards, the Treasurer is authorized to enter into lease purchase agreements according to whichCertificates of Participation are issued.More information from the state and here are exciting details of the law…and lastly a summary of public finance.


Bill Donavan

Bill Donavan

Bill Donavan Bill co-founded the Citizen with Trey Beck. Bill's latest effort is The Dangerous Collective, a full-service media and marketing agency in downtown Salida. www.dangerouscollective.com

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