Eric Doden says school district consolidation is ‘death knell’ for rural Indiana

Eric Doden, candidate for 2024 Republican nomination for governor of Indiana

Sep 20, 2023
Key Points
  • The Indiana Chamber of Commerce is pushing small school district consolidation as one way to create new educational opportunities for students in rural Indiana
  • Republican gubernatorial candidate Eric Doden is calling on the business group to end that policy proposal, saying it damages small towns
  • The Indiana Chamber labeled Doden’s thinking as “status quo” and “not acceptable”

Republican gubernatorial candidate Eric Doden is calling on the Indiana Chamber of Commerce to end its support for school district consolidation in rural Indiana. 

In a letter sent today, the Fort Wayne businessman labeled the business group’s position as “damaging.”

(Design: Brittney Phan)

“While the stated aims of this position are laudable, the message sent to our small towns and rural communities is damaging,” Doden wrote. “Proposing to do away with small public school districts through consolidation will be seen as a death knell for the millions of Hoosiers who live in small towns and rural communities.” 

For years, the Indiana Chamber has advocated for fewer school districts across Indiana. A 2017 study commissioned through Ball State University identified worse educational outcomes for students in smaller districts in several categories, including scores for state standardized testing and the SAT, as well as the pass rates for Advanced Placement classes. 

The Indiana Chamber re-upped its position last month when it released its long term economic development plan. Among the listed policies was a goal to “reduce by half the number of very small school districts with enrollments below 2,000 students to provide much stronger educational opportunities for rural students and communities.” 

More than half of Indiana’s school districts have fewer than 2,000 students. 

In a statement to State Affairs, Indiana Chamber President and CEO Kevin Brinegar said the state is providing a “two-tiered educational system” depending on income and ZIP code. 

“Hoosier students should not be limited academically solely due to where they live. And that’s the case now in some of the smaller school districts where students are not afforded the opportunity to take a full array of STEM, Advanced Placement or college preparation courses,” Brinegar said in the statement. “The Chamber’s stance on smaller school district consolidation is rooted in wanting to lift up young Hoosiers in these rural communities, so they have a better chance at prosperity by properly preparing them for the state’s current and future job opportunities.”

Eric Doden
Eric Doden, 2024 Republican candidate for governor of Indiana (Credit: Doden for Indiana)

The statement also contained a specific response to Doden’s criticism. 

“We would be happy to sit down with Mr. Doden and go through the research and show him why we have adopted this position for the betterment of the academic and economic opportunities for our young people,” Brinegar said in the statement. “The status quo that Mr. Doden is championing has and will continue to leave small communities, schools and students behind. That’s not acceptable.”

But whereas the business group sees consolidation as one way to improve life in rural Indiana, Doden sees the opposite. 

“Across our state it’s easy to see the remnants of a school consolidation push that began in the 1950s,” Doden wrote in his letter. “Too many towns that lost their local school to consolidation dried up and were virtually swept from the maps while other towns kept their schools and their identities. These communities had a better opportunity to survive.” 

https://stateaffairs.com/indiana/education/indiana-general-assembly-school-consolidation/

Doden also cited one of his policy proposals, which would redirect $100 million in state money toward small towns — in an effort to address declines in populations and quality of life. 

“With local leadership and local control, we can revitalize our small towns and hometowns with a fraction of the investment we give away in the form of incentives,” Doden wrote.

Doden addressed the letter to Vanessa Green Sinders, who will replace Brinegar as the Indiana Chamber’s leader. Her tenure will begin in January, so she was unavailable to provide comment to State Affairs.  Either way, the Indiana Chamber’s members are the ones who suggest policy positions for the board of directors to approve before each legislative session.

In addition to Doden, the crowded Republican field for governor includes U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, former Commerce Secretary Brad Chambers, Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch and former Attorney General Curtis Hill

Jennifer McCormick, the former state superintendent of public education, has emerged as the leading Democratic candidate. Instead of school district consolidation, the state should reevaluate its expansion of school choice vouchers, McCormick has previously said

Contact Ryan Martin on X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or at [email protected].

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Header image: Eric Doden, 2024 Republican candidate for governor of Indiana (Credit: Eric Doden for Indiana Governor/Facebook)

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