The education sector was named one of the big winners in this year's Budget announcement, with $11 billion being poured into helping our schools teach the future generations.
Pretty impressive right? No, not when you realise what that money is being (and not being) spent on: $397 million for early childhood education (ECE), $883 million for new school property, $43 million for schools to target most at-risk students, and $42 million for high and special education students.
But the Government has turned deaf ears to the pleas of sector leaders I spoke to before the Budget, failing to substantially increase the operational grants of schools - even worse, putting a total freeze on the funding.
On the day of the Budget, a reporter turned to me excitedly saying "Steph, you'll be happy, education got a good chunk of this year's Budget".
But I knew I was not going to be talking with happy sector leaders as just a few days earlier, every principal I spoke to said their number one wish this Budget was to see the gap close between the cost of running a school and how much funding they got to cover that cost. What they got instead? Not even an increase to match inflation. Instead they will have to once again go out, cap in hand, asking for handouts to fund the fallacy that is New Zealand's free education system.