Funding and career development top issues at annual State of the Schools
Business, education and civic leaders assembled last Tuesday in the annual State of Schools event, sponsored by the Huntsville Madison County Chamber of Commerce and The Schools Foundation. Madison City Superintendent Dr. Ed Nichols joined Huntsville Supt. Dr. Clarence Sutton and Madison County Supt. Mr. Ken Kubick in a Q&A following the keynote presentation by Assistant State Supt. of Learning, Dr. Melissa Shields. A superintendents panel followed with Dr. Shields serving as moderator. The superintendent panel provided insights into issues like funding challenges, unequitable mandates for public education vs. private schools, teaching hurdles through burdensome regulations and requirements. Among the MCS strengths Dr. Nichols noted were STEM programs in every elementary school, a wide offering of career tech courses in secondary schools, and dedicated teachers and staffs throughout the district. Photo by John Peck
Madison County Record, News, Schools, The Madison Recor, Z - News Main
 By Maria Rakoczy  
Published 6:03 am Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Funding and career development top issues at annual State of the Schools

MADISON – Madison County, Huntsville City, and Madison City school superintendents gathered for a panel discussion at the Huntsville- Madison County Chamber of Commerce’s annual State of the Schools event last week with updates on their districts and conversation on how each district is addressing their unique challenges. Funding and career development programs were top issues addressed by Madison City Schools Superintendent Dr. Ed Nichols.

While Huntsville City Schools just built a brand new facility for career tech programs, Madison City Schools relies heavily on the 17 career academies at Bob Jones and James Clemens High Schools and the 105 career courses offered for grades 6-12.

“We also use our partners,” said Nichols. “We offer a lot of courses with our partners in Calhoun, our partners at Drake. We also send students to the craft training facility in Decatur. So, while we don’t have a facility that brings kids from our high schools, we replicate those programs in each high school and then use a lot of the partners that are in this room to help us expand.”

STEM education starts in pre-k. Career courses available through middle school and high school and students have the opportunities to learn skills hands-on through partner programs.

Funding was a top concern for Dr. Nichols at the start of the year as he worked with city hall to extend a half-cent property tax dedicated to funding the school district was set to expire in 2027. On Jan. 9, the Madison City Council approved the extension of that half-cent tax, allowing the continuation of capital improvement projects at both high schools and 50 teacher units.

“I want to say ‘thank you for extending our half-cent sales tax because our school system would be in shambles today if you and your partners on the council had not done that,” said Nichols. “It took political courage, and I want to say, ‘Thank you!’” According to Nichols, Madison City Schools ranks low in local funding among Alabama districts and the half-cent tax was critical funding.

“We’re not loaded by the way. We are 130th in funding for local schools in the state of Alabama out of 147,” cautioned Nichols.

He noted that funding is increasingly important for Madison and the Huntsville metro area as U.S. Space Command is expected to bring and additional 1,300 jobs to the area.

Madison City Schools ranked among the top 10 in Alabama in Niche’s 2025-26 rankings.

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