Ingrid Burnett
Ingrid Burnett is an American politician and educator from Missouri. She is a member of the Democratic Party. She was a member of the Kansas City Public Schools Board of Directors from 2002 to 2008, including as vice president. Her tenure there coincided with the academic and financial fallout from the landmark Missouri v. Jenkins case about KCPS's historic and unconstitutional racial segregation. KCPS had become the first in the nation to lose its accreditation in 2000, and regained a provisional status in 2002, the year she joined the board.
She represented District 19 in the Missouri House of Representatives from 2017 until 2025, when she was term-limited. From 2019 to 2025, Burnett was the House Minority Caucus Chair.
During her legislative tenure, Burnett publicly criticized the Greitens administration's use of the secretive Confide messaging app, arguing it violated the state's Sunshine Law. In 2024, she was the sole dissenting vote on a bill that prohibited local governments from enacting eviction moratoriums.
Early life and education
Burnett was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She is a long-time resident of Kansas City's Historic Northeast area. She graduated from Webster Groves High School in 1971. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in music education and music therapy from the University of Missouri–Kansas City in 1979. In 1998, she earned a Master of Science in counseling psychology from Avila University.Career
Education and politics
Burnett was the principal of Holy Family School in Independence until the school's closure in 1996. After receiving her master's degree, she worked as an elementary counselor in the Independence School District.In 2002, she joined the Kansas City Public Schools Board of Directors, including as vice president, and left in 2008. Her tenure coincided with the academic and financial fallout from the conclusion of the Missouri v. Jenkins case. In 2000, KCPS had become the first in the nation to lose its accreditation, and regained a provisional status in 2002, the year she joined the board. In this landmark case about the school district's historic loss of state accreditation due to its unconstitutional racial segregation, the major legal rulings were issued by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1995, followed by a final settlement between the state and KCPS in 1997, prior to her tenure on the board. Closure of the case still required the board's complete administrative actions. Her website states she had "a key role in resolving the district's long-running federal desegregation lawsuit".
In 2002, she also became the Jackson County Democratic Committee representative for Ward 11.
Missouri House of Representatives
Burnett was first elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 2016 and served until she was term-limited in 2025, serving as the House Minority Caucus Chair from 2019 to 2025. Her legislative work focused on themes from her career in education and on government transparency.Education policy
Burnett's policy positions were informed by her 30-year career as an educator and counselor. She became one of four legislators appointed to the Blue Ribbon Commission on Teacher Recruitment and Retention, defining her motivation to KCUR-FM: "We can't continue to treat our teachers this way... That was the passion that I came to the commission with, that we would find a way to get support staff in the classroom". She noted that she successfully allocated money for support staff in the previous year's budget, but Governor Mike Parson vetoed it. She argued that low teacher pay was driving educators to neighboring states, telling KCUR that "oftentimes, there's more political advantage to being critical of the public schools than there is to supporting them".She championed the state's Career Ladder program and its salary supplements: "It allowed me to pay for my kid's braces. I couldn't have done that without the Career Ladder Program." She took public stances on curriculum censorship, and in 2022, was quoted in Mother Jones denouncing a one-sided legislative hearing on critical race theory: "It is the height of irony that a hearing to consider censoring curriculum would censor those who are allowed to speak".
Her work was recognized with several advocacy awards from educational groups. In 2022, she received the Horace Mann Award from the Missouri National Education Association, given to officials who have "worked for the passage of important educational legislation". In 2024, she received the Otto Bean Jr. Award from the Missouri Art Education Association, which honors "elected officials who have significantly advanced the arts and art education in Missouri". In 2024, she received the "Government Advocate Award" from the Missouri Alliance for Arts Education.
Legislative stances
In 2018, Burnett emerged as a vocal critic of the Eric Greitens administration's use of Confide, a messaging app that destroys messages after they are read. She argued that the practice violated the state's public records Sunshine Law, and told the PBS NewsHour, "We should not be allowed to conduct state business using invisible ink".In 2024, she opposed a bill to fund the deployment of Missouri State Highway Patrol troopers to the U.S. border in Texas. She argued that the resources were needed locally, telling the press it was "a reckless move to deplete our service people".
In 2024, she cast the single dissenting vote on housing policy, when the House passed a bill to prohibit local governments from enacting eviction moratoriums. She explained to KCUR, "We can't anticipate the kinds of disasters that could require some extraordinary circumstance, extraordinary rules".