School board members criticize state funding Houston Chronicle Copyright 2012 Houston Chronicle. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Published 9:31 p.m., Wednesday, October 31, 2012 AUSTIN - A school finance trial produced several school board members for the first time Wednesday as Judge John Dietz heard first-hand complaints about inequitable funding of Texas public education. Assistant Attorney General Bill Deane asked Langston and other school board witnesses about who sets tax rates and approved budgets in their school districts to establish a record that local school boards, not the state, makes funding decisions. In a formal brief filed in the case two months ago, Abbott and his staff contend Texas' public education system hinges on local control and that the success or failure of a school district "is necessarily linked to the school district's own leadership, policies and operations." The state's entire public school system should not be rendered unsuitable or unconstitutional simply because a particular school district struggles to provide its students the constitution's required "general diffusion of knowledge," Abbott and staff attorneys argued in their brief. Alief Superintendent HD Chambers estimated it would take an extra $2,600 to $2,800 per student to put his high schools on track to get 70 percent of students ready for college or a career by graduation.