Takeaways from the 2026-27 Minnesota Governor’s Biennial Budget
What’s changing
The Governor proposes to end the Alternative Teacher Professional Pay System (ATPPS)—commonly called Q Comp—starting in FY 2027.
- FY 2026: Program continues as-is
- FY 2027 onward: Program is eliminated
Fiscal impact (big picture)
- State aid reduction
- −$78.7M in FY 2026–27
- −$173.1M in FY 2028–29
- Local levy reduction
- −$39.5M per year starting FY 2027
- One-time reconciliation
- $8.837M in FY 2027 to settle FY 2026 obligations due to 90/10 payment timing
This is a real funding cut, not a restructuring.
What Q Comp is (and why it’s being eliminated)
- Created in 2005
- Voluntary program allowing districts and unions to bargain performance-based pay systems
- Provides up to:
- $260 per pupil (state aid + levy)
- Charter schools receive equivalent state aid
- Currently used by:
- 184 school organizations
- Serving ~55% of Minnesota teachers (~39,000 teachers)
Governor’s rationale:
- Since 2014–15, all districts are already required to operate Teacher Development & Evaluation (TDE) systems
- Q Comp and TDE now duplicate each other
- Many districts already meet TDE requirements without dedicated funding
- The state no longer wants to fund two parallel systems
What replaces Q Comp
Nothing new.
- All districts must still operate Teacher Development & Evaluation (TDE) under existing law
- No replacement funding is provided for Q Comp incentives
- MDE’s Educator Workforce & Development Center will provide technical assistance only
What happens to existing Q Comp money
- Any remaining Q Comp reserve balances:
- Must still be used for teacher incentive pay
- Cannot revert to district general funds
- Can be spent until exhausted
What this means for districts
- Loss of:
- Performance-based compensation funding
- Dedicated funding tied to professional development structures
- Districts must:
- Maintain TDE systems with fewer dollars
- Renegotiate collective bargaining agreements that referenced Q Comp
- Impact varies:
- Districts heavily invested in Q Comp feel this most
- Districts already operating TDE without Q Comp funding see less disruption
Bottom line
This proposal:
- Eliminates a long-standing teacher compensation program
- Cuts more than $170M per biennium in education funding
- Leaves districts with mandatory evaluation systems but no dedicated funding
- Shifts professional development and incentive costs fully onto local budgets
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