
Ninth grade students in John Schneggenburger's biology class learn how to map pedigrees in genetics at Copper Mountain Middle School on Jan. 29, 2014 in Herriman, Utah. When lawmakers decided to boost per-pupil spending last year by 2 percent, many Utahns cheered, envisioning that cash raining on teachers and classrooms. In reality, much of that money was spoken for, by the state retirement system, long before it ever hit schools, a Salt Lake Tribune investigation has found. In the Salt Lake City and Alpine school districts, not one cent of the increased student funding made it into classrooms. All of it went to the state retirement system and/or rising health care costs. It's a pattern that could repeat this year unless lawmakers find more money per student than what's so far been proposed. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Al Hartmann)
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