DURANT, Miss. — In a state with a long history of lousy education, and a bad habit of not paying for it, nowhere is the problem more profound than in this tiny town in the middle of Mississippi.
Durant Public School teachers spend their nights on the Internet, searching for math and other problems to give their students because the school doesn't have any up-to-date textbooks.
School leaders say they can't afford new books or a reading coach to help raise the district's "D" academic rating. There's a leaky roof and crumbling ceiling tiles, no marching band and no advanced placement classes. To save money, the number of teachers and their assistants were reduced and administrators took pay cuts.
The troubles in this town of 2,700, where the closest Wal-Mart is about 20 miles away, illustrate pressures across Mississippi. Since 2008, legislators have ignored a state law and spent $1.5 billion less on education than what's required. The cuts are among the deepest in the nation.
In response, about 80 percent of Mississippi's 146 school districts have raised property taxes since 2008, the last time lawmakers provided full funding under the state formula, according to an Associated Press review. By law, some districts can't raise property taxes any higher to fund operations, leaving them even more dependent on state money.
The AP used data from the Mississippi Department of Education in its review, as well as calculations of underfunding by district made available by The Parents' Campaign, an advocacy group seeking full funding.
Some districts sued this fall to make the state pay what the districts say they're owed. Another group is trying to get a funding guarantee written into the state constitution, trying to force lawmakers to provide more money.
In Durant, about 60 miles north of the state capital of Jackson, teacher Rebecca Austin has to photocopy handouts for her math students because the school's textbooks don't meet Common Core standards. The old books are locked away in a closet.