KY lawmaker says she’ll push a ban on public schools hiring private lobbyists
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- Rep. Vanessa Grossl plans 2026 bill to ban K-12 districts from hiring lobbyists
- FCPS paid Piper-Smith $60,000 yearly and $38,000 for tax campaign work
- Grossl argues private lobbyists favor wealthy districts and skew state funding
A state lawmaker said she hopes to file a bill this winter that would ban the Fayette County Public Schools and other K-12 school districts from using public money to hire their own private lobbyists.
On Friday, the Herald-Leader reported that the Fayette County Public Schools has a Lexington firm, Piper-Smith LLC, on a three-year contract, paying it $60,000 annually to lobby Kentucky state government.
In addition, Superintendent Demetrus Liggins in May awarded a second contract to Piper-Smith for $38,000 to promote a controversial 50% increase in the school district’s occupational license tax.
When the tax increase effort abruptly failed in June, the lobbyists turned their attention to behind-the-scenes reputation damage control for Liggins amid a worsening school district budget shortfall.
State Rep. Vanessa Grossl, R-Georgetown, said Monday the Fayette County Public Schools should not send outside lobbyists to Frankfort to promote its interests to legislators and the state Education Department. Grossl’s district includes part of Fayette County.
It’s one thing for all school districts or employees to pool their collective resources among statewide advocacy groups like the Kentucky Education Association and the Kentucky School Boards Association, Grossl said.
But only a few of the wealthiest school districts can afford private lobbyists, which can give them advantages on issues ranging from state transportation funding to preschool and Head State programs, she said.
Fayette, Jefferson and Bullitt counties are the three public school districts with lobbyists registered as of this week with the Kentucky Legislative Ethics Commission.
“I just feel like it’s the haves and the have-nots, and by enabling them to go ahead and hire their own outside lobbyists, it puts them on a whole other level,” said Grossl, who taught at a Fayette County elementary school for five years. “It’s like, are you really a public school anymore?”
Legislators from Fayette County are the people in the General Assembly who should advocate for the Fayette County Public Schools, not lobbyists, Grossl said.
“These other districts would love to have the extra money to be able to even think about — I mean, they can’t even fathom doing this kind of thing, like hiring your own lobbyists,” she said.
“And when Dr. Liggins came to meet with me several months ago in Frankfort, once all the turmoil started happening, I said to him — and I love Piper-Smith, (partners) Jared (Smith) and Abby (Piper) are wonderful people — but I just said to him ‘You have your own lobbying firm representing you? We are approachable!’”
Grossl said her bill in the 2026 General Assembly would ban the hiring of private lobbyists by K-12 public school districts.
She said she’s open to hearing discussion about bills to ban private lobbying expenditures by state universities and local governments, as some of her colleagues have proposed, but her focus at present is on school districts.
“I think this legislation that I’m filing is a floor and not a ceiling, but I really am focused here on K-12,” she said “And I don’t plan on going after any of the alphabet soup groups like KSPA or KEA or any of those. A lot of those groups provide essential training and other support for the school districts and for the staff.”
The 2026 General Assembly begins in January.
This story was originally published October 6, 2025 at 12:45 PM.