You Can Tell A Lot about us through Our Education Budget As Chiang Calls for a Deal by June 15

Californians once took great pride in our educational system.  We built one of the greatest public education systems in the world, both K-12 and higher ed.  We passed prop 98 to protect education funding and a majority has consistenly supported school funding at higher levels. However, in the last few years, things have been slipping. The Republicans have been working to subtly undermine the grounds that Prop 98 has stood upon, and they have their sights set on bigger chunks of money in the next budget fight.

Today, educational advocates are going to testify in the budget conference committee. From janitors to teachers, aides to superintendents, the entire school team needs to be represented as we work towards protecting the future of this state.  Education is simply THE key to our economic future, if we neglect it now, we solve no long-term problems and only create more.

The hearing begins this morning at 10:30 in the Capitol, but the fight will go all the way through a deal.  And, according to State Controller John Chiang, we need to have a deal by June 15:

The cash shortage will be four times as bad as this past winter, when California stopped infrastructure projects and delayed payments to vendors and refunds to taxpayers.

State Controller John Chiang told lawmakers Friday that declining tax revenue will cause the state’s treasury to fall $2.1 billion into the red in July.

He urged lawmakers to pass a budget by the June 15 constitutional deadline. If they don’t act quickly to cut spending or raise revenue, Chiang said the deficit will hit $14.3 billion by December.(News10 (AP) 6/1/09)

As we move forward over the next two weeks, we are surely going to try to see some attempts by interest groups to get their perspectives heard.  However, given the time-sensitive nature of this, one has to wonder how much public input we are going to get.  Crisis-based budgeting only breeds more crises.

4 thoughts on “You Can Tell A Lot about us through Our Education Budget As Chiang Calls for a Deal by June 15”

  1. This is where a federal backstop would be very, very helpful.

    I also am coming to believe that the way CA can earn that is for the Democrats in the legislature to propose something serious and reasonable in terms of taxes. Doesn’t matter if it’ll get a 2/3rds vote or not (and I’m growing tired of Democrats using the 2/3rds rule as a crutch for not offering progressive solutions). All they need to do is seriously propose an idea and organize around it and try to sell it. That will give the White House confidence that there are people in CA government trying to right the ship, and make them less worried that even a backstop that costs them nothing will enable bad behavior.

    (And I hate that frame, “enable bad behavior”, but it’s clear that’s what the White House thinks any federal aid to CA would accomplish.)

  2. Should we kill AIDS patients and scrap all vocational training and substance abuse programs in prisons, close most state parks, eliminate Calworks, murder AIDs patients by denying their medicine and kill the elderly by removing in home health services?

    If CTA and the education lobby don’t see the common purpose, and keep treating this as a zero sum game, they are as much of the problem as Schwarzenegger and Chuck Devore.

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