Eliminate the exchanging of funds for paying personal property taxes
Illinois would evaluate expanding the gifted funding adequacy factor to include more advanced academic programs (AP/IB/dual credit, etc.) starting 2026–27, with a report due by 12/
Illinois would evaluate expanding the gifted funding adequacy factor to include more advanced academic programs (AP/IB/dual credit, etc.) starting 2026–27, with a report due by 12/
Status: Joint resolution; Referred to Assignments (Senate)
Introduced: August 20, 2025 (multiple filings and amendment activity)
Chief House sponsor: Rep. Daniel Didech; Chief Senate sponsor: Sen. Adriane Johnson
Related: HJR 8 (companion)
HJR 29 directs the Illinois Professional Review Panel and the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) to evaluate the implications of expanding the Evidence‑Based Funding Formula’s “gifted” adequacy factor to include other categories of advanced academic programming (e.g., accelerated placement, AP, IB, dual credit, enriched/honors courses). The resolution requests financial modeling and a written report on findings to the General Assembly and the Governor.
If the evaluation recommends and later leads to policy action, Illinois could broaden the funding adequacy factor beyond the current $40/ASE “gifted” allocation, which may increase targeted funding for students in a wider array of advanced academic programs and alter district-level funding distributions.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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