(Just one voice shouting into the abyss… – promoted by David Dayen)
Last year I was on a BART train headed to San Francisco and spoke to a council member of an East Bay city. We were discussing the state budget crisis. I detailed how the Governor’s proposed cuts would harm our schools. The council member quipped, “The Governor can’t manufacture money.” I replied, “Yes, but he can manufacture leadership.”
Leadership from Sacramento has been glaringly absent under the administration of Arnold Schwarzenegger. He came into office on a promise that he would “protect California’s commitment to education funding.” His January 2009 budget proposals would devastate public education in California. A friend of mine who served as a school board member for many years in the East Bay sees his budget as setting our schools back two decades.
I am greatly concerned that the Democratic leadership in Sacramento may be on the verge of reaching a compromise that, despite their best intentions, balances the budget on the backs of our children.
Nor do I foresee any concession from the Republicans to place an initiative on the ballot for the voters to decide whether to alter in the California Constitution to eliminate the effective veto power the Republican legislative minority has over the state budget.
Here is an Op Ed I have submitted to my local papers on the California budget crisis:
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A Category 5 fiscal hurricane about to hit California’s public schools. The state deficit is close to $42 billion over the next 18 months. That exceeds what the state annually allocates from its general fund for K-12 public education. Governor Schwarzenegger has proposed cutting over $6 billion from education, constituting a more than 15% reduction in state aid to public schools.
The deficit did not arise recently. Since the Fall of 2007, when the housing market began to rapidly meltdown, state revenues have dropped precipitously. At the time the Governor claimed excessive spending was the cause of the budget crisis.
If you can not identify the cause of a problem, you can not fix it. In his January 2008 budget, the Governor’s proposals to raise revenue were, in the words of the Legislative Analyst, “minimal.”
The state budget eventually adopted was full of accounting gimmicks. Soon after the November elections, the Governor announced that the budget was grossly out of balance and called the Legislature back for a special session.
The Republicans refused to consider any tax increases. The Democrats responded by forwarding to the Governor a budget that would have cut the deficit in half and allowed the state to pay its bills for the remainder of the fiscal year. The Governor vetoed the bill. He did so for ideological reasons. The Democrats declined to support non-budget items which the Governor sought, including a loosening of environmental review standards on major construction projects.
With the state on the verge of not being able to pay its bills, it is possible a budget deal will be adopted sooner than later. The Democrats are apparently offering a package of 50% cuts and 50% tax increases to solve the budget crisis. If the Republican legislators agree, and that is a big “if,” there will be $21 billion in cuts to state spending.
Even at this amount, the impact on our public schools will devastating. Increased class sizes, elimination of sports and music programs, laying off librarians, nurses, counselors and speech therapists, cleaning classrooms every other day to reduce custodial positions, and deferring needed maintenance are all measures school districts are seriously considering to balance their budgets.
Education is not a luxury to be funded solely in flush financial times. Each year of a child’s education is precious. Moreover, as is, California woefully under invests in public education. According to Education Week, our state ranks 47th in the nation in K-12 grade spending per student when accounting for regional cost differences. The last action any Legislator should agree to is further significant cuts to education.
When he ran for office, the Governor promised he would “protect California’s commitment to education funding.” Let’s hold him to his word, and insist that our local Legislators do the same.
They can start by restoring the car tax. When the Governor took office he cut the vehicle license fee by two-thirds. That is now costing us $6 billion a year, the same amount the Governor wants to take away from our public schools.
All children deserve a quality education. Those who hold political office must ensure that our public schools receive the resources necessary to succeed.
Stephen Cassidy
Attorney and Former School Board Trustee, San Leandro