IPE/BC is an independent, non-partisan organization, however we recognize that IPE/BC Associates and guest authors hold a range of views and interests relative to public schools, education issues, and the political landscape in BC. Perspectives is an opportunity for Associates and others to share their ideas in short, accessible essays.
Denying the reality of education underfunding
August 3, 2025
By Moira Mackenzie
Gaslighting: a form of manipulation where someone is led to question their own reality, memory, or sanity, often by denying or misrepresenting events or situations.
Once again, prior to the end of June, BC’s school boards approved their budgets for the coming school year and, once again, faced with significant shortfalls, many districts have approved even more budget cuts. The persistent gap in funding, over many years and through governments of differing political stripes, has resulted in a public education system now under severe stress. We know that the staffing shortages, overcrowding, lack of sufficient funding for inclusion, dwindling supplies and program losses have already created deep cracks in what should be a strong, stable, accessible system that fully supports all students. If anything, the persistent and decades long denial of the needs and reality in our public schools begins to feel like gaslighting.
Parents/caregivers, support staff, teachers, trustees, advocacy organizations, and, in a number of cases, young people themselves are speaking out. They know well the impact of underfunding on student learning and well-being, and on the school community as a whole. They’ve been imploring the government to address the shortfalls, reverse the losses, and make public education a high priority. Their perspectives should be welcomed and respected.
Yet, even as the pressure on public schools escalates, the responses from successive governments have changed very little over many years and, unfortunately, too often serve to dismiss the reality of all those directly connected with our valued public schools.
Let’s look at the prevailing and, unfortunately, enduring government messaging.
- These are tough decisions that boards have to make at the local level.
True, the decisions are excruciating, but it’s the province that controls the funding. When the actual needs of public schools and the complexities of supporting students aren’t adequately accounted for in the pot of money given to each board, the conditions inevitably deteriorate. As an example, while I applaud successive provincial governments that have advanced inclusion in public education, the funding falls far short of the support and services needed. In 2023/24 alone, there was a $340 million dollar shortfall between what the government provided and what school districts needed to spend on inclusive education.
The government transfers public tax dollars to school districts and boards are required to set their budgets within the funds they’re
given or be subject to dismissal. It’s the provincial government dictates the size of the pie, regardless of whether it’s adequate, and boards are simply left to slice it up. We can safely conclude that no district would even consider cutbacks if the funding matched the costs.
- Every student, no matter where their families live, receives the same level of support.
This messaging appears to answer a question that was not being asked. We can all agree that students, regardless of where their families live, should have access to quality, accessible, inclusive public education. It’s the level of funding that is the issue, not the location of the students.
- Education is receiving the highest funding ever. We’ve increased education dollars every year.
Of course, the education funding figure is the highest ever. Districts are primarily funded based on student enrollment numbers and, as we know, the student population in BC has increased significantly. The total number of K-12 public school students was 521,038 in 2014/15. Last year, public school enrolment in BC reached a historical high point of 614, 869.[ii]
In addition, it simply stands to reason that, with inflationary pressures and rising costs, more funding would be required just to deliver the
same services as the year before. It’s very likely that the dollars allocated to most, if not all government services, are the “highest ever.” But, in terms of per pupil spending in education, BC does not have a record to crow about. According to Stats Can updated figures for the year 2022 (latest available) BC ranked fourth from the bottom of the provinces and territories in dollars per pupil dedicated to public education. [iii]
Further, it’s telling to look at the percentage of the gross provincial product being transferred to school districts to fund their operating costs. That is, how does the amount of tax dollars given in operating grants to school districts compare year over year as a percentage of Gross Provincial Product. In 2022, as reported by Stats Can the percentage going to education in BC was 3.0%, the second lowest among the provinces and territories in Canada. [iv]
Considered another way, for the 2023/24 school fiscal year, BC reported allocating grants totaling $6,754 billion across the province’s sixty school districts. If BC were to spend at the “% of GDP” rate that it did in back in the year 2000, this budgetary allocation would increase by $3.8 billion to $10.552 billion. [v]
- Our education system is doing very well. Wonderful things are happening in BC schools, our students continue to score highly on international exams and other jurisdictions are using the BC curriculum.
We agree- amazing things are happening in BC public schools and that’s entirely to the credit of teachers, support staff, parents, administrators, students and the school community overall. It’s not at all a sign that the funding matches the needs and it’s certainly not sustainable as pressures mount. And, when another jurisdiction choses to use the K-12 curriculum developed in BC through the hard work contributed by teams of BC teachers, they are not also endorsing the conditions under which it is being taught. These are two different realities.
- We’re in difficult and uncertain times. We can’t afford to boost education funding.
To that, I would say, we simply can’t afford not to. We know that quality, accessible, inclusive public education is key to a healthy democracy and thriving society. We believe that in dark and uncertain times, support for public education is all the more important. Today’s young people are growing up a world that’s facing incredibly complex problems and threatening conditions. Providing students with the skills, knowledge and supports to help them to not only cope but contribute in a meaningful way is more urgent than ever. It’s a sound investment in our collective future.
Further, at a time when public schools are in dire need, it’s impossible to justify the substantial sum of public tax dollars going to private schools. In 2024/25 alone the total was a whopping $570 million. [vi]
Just imagine the gaps that could be filled if these dollars stayed in the public system each year.
- Education funding isn’t a top priority for voters.
An additional and somewhat less public reason sometimes given for the funding crisis is that spending on public education is not identified as a top priority by a majority voters and therefore is not a “vote getter” issue. If this is so, it’s understandable. In contrast to healthcare, for example, the daily impact of education underfunding may not be as evident to individuals who don’t directly engage with the system. However public education truly is a foundational public service- a societal benefit that we can all rely on whether or not we’re directly connected to a school.
As chronic underfunding takes a bigger and bigger toll, a wise and long overdue move for government would be to invite feedback and learn from those who experience the pressures and tensions in public schools firsthand, rather than appearing, however inadvertently, to deny their reality. Gaslighting is a term that may occur to many who struggle to secure the services and support children and youth need. The broken record responses are doing no one any good; it’s really time they were traded for a much more meaningful dialogue.
[i] Beyond the Gap- https://instituteforpubliceducation.org/beyond-the-gap-the-need-for-accountable-education-funding-that-demonstrates-that-society-values-inclusion/
[ii] Government of BC – https://www.bcbudget.gov.bc.ca/2025/sp/pdf/ministry/educ.pdf and https://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015EDUC0051-001334
[iii] StatsCan tables 37-10-0064, 37-10-0065, 37-10-0007 and 37-10-0153
[iv] The Facts on Education Funding https://instituteforpubliceducation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/BC-Education-Funding-Facts.pdf
[v] The Facts on Education Funding Facts- https://instituteforpubliceducation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/BC-Education-Funding-Facts.pdf
[vi] Public Funds for Public Schools- https://instituteforpubliceducation.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Public-Funds-for-Public-Schools.pdf
Moira Mackenzie is a member of the IPE/BC Board of Directors and retired educator. She taught for many years at the primary and intermediate levels, as well as in inclusive education as a Resource and Learning Assistance teacher. Moira also worked at the BCTF in professional issues and communications positions, and as the federation’s Executive Director.
For further reading on education funding:
BC school boards faced to make cuts; say they’re all out of Band-Aids
Increased public funding for private schools is dividing us and needs to stop
Is BC’s Education Underfunded and at a “Tipping Point”?
Music education allows students to access and express emotions that they may not otherwise have words or actions for. It helps them to manage their emotions. It also helps students to feel and to understand others’ emotions. When students play in an ensemble, they learn to listen – not simply hear – and they learn to wait for their turn. They learn to support others, and to create and enjoy the harmony that is realized in teamwork. These are life skills that make such students a better friend, partner, co-worker, and citizen. Music education has been shown to teach students to navigate social interactions and resolve conflicts in a positive way, to be more self-aware, and to be more empathetic. They read social cues and thrive.
They study spirituals, protest songs and ballads that have been passed down through generations. Diverse styles such as jazz, classical, country, soul, singing, reggae, opera, folk, pop, rock, hip-hop, rhythm & blues, EDM (electronic dance music) are all part of a proper music education curriculum. These experiences show students who we are, where we have been, and who we can become. Music is a universal language; it transcends cultural and linguistic boundaries and connects us.
cards for – over 350 students, three times each year. I conducted five choirs, three bands and taught general Music K-grade seven. That meant three different staff meetings, innumerable parent-teacher meetings, eight festival entries and countless school concerts. My assigned ‘classrooms’ were school gyms, libraries and when lucky, portables. One school year, my meagre budget meant using fishing line to replace ukulele strings; a durable but not melodious remedy. Lunch ‘breaks’ were usually spent driving to the next school. Programs can devolve from quality to quantity; thirty minutes of music per week does not equate quality music education. Public school music education needs to be reconsidered as essential for brains, hearts, and our future, rather than a luxury or bonus that only students in private schools can access (look at a brochure for any private school and you will always see classes for stringed instruments and arts).
The Ministry of Education and Child Care’s policy manual for the provision of inclusive education services outlines a “continuous and flexible” process for identifying students with disabilities and diverse needs and then providing the necessary supports.
least the past 17 years. In 2023-24, for example, provincial government funding only covered 72.3% of what BC school districts spent to provide inclusive education services. In dollar terms, this was a $340 million dollar funding shortfall that districts were forced to cover with their core operational funding. Besides creating pressure for districts to redirect funding from other operational areas, the lack of funding forces districts to ration inclusive education staff and services. Research with teachers has found that this can be seen as having to “triage the system,” including trying to fit in supports through creative scheduling, shifting support intended for one student to multiple students, and cobbling multiple small supports together.
Increased funding alone will not “fix” inclusive education. However, it is the necessary condition for moving BC along the path of more inclusive school communities.
This isn’t to say that excessive cell phone use or social media isn’t negatively impacting youth; rather, it suggests that banning phones in schools isn’t the solution politicians often claim it to be.
shortchanging them by opting for simplistic (and often hard-to-enforce) bans instead of more comprehensive, nuanced approaches? Wouldn’t it be better to help them develop healthy tech habits and the ability to set boundaries for themselves, enabling them to use technology constructively?
phone use. Schools and the education system are well-positioned to play a central role in this, but it will take much more than the “headline-grabbing gimmicks” of cellphone bans.
their children with disabilities and/or diverse needs. These parents and many others know it’s a system under stress; they and their children regularly and directly experience the impact of teacher and support staff shortages and chronic underfunding. They also know how difficult it is to access the education decision-makers and be heard. And they speak to the fact that placing students with disabilities and/or diverse needs in classrooms without the necessary supports or, as is sometimes the case, in segregated classrooms, serves to stigmatize their children and seriously undermines their ability to succeed.
Looking back, inclusion first became a government initiative in the 1980s. The Royal Commission on Education report in 1988 and subsequent education School Act revisions mandated the closing of segregated schools and established the requirement that neighbourhood schools were to provide for the success of all children. There was the expectation of significant positive change and, for a time, there were meaningful steps in that direction. But, years of underfunding and the lack of adequate staffing and supports has us seeing inadequate supports as the “norm” and exclusionary practices coming back- reduced time at school, exclusion from certain activities, and, in some cases, even segregated programs and classes.
We’d add one more step. We’d encourage everyone to call on each school district and the Ministry of Education and Child Care to hold similar forums with parents/caregivers, support staff, educators and students to learn from their experiences and recommit to fully supported inclusion in all of our public schools.