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The budget adjustment proposal unveiled Tuesday (January
22, 2002) by Gov. McCallum keeps Wisconsins investment in K-12
public education a priority, according to the president of the Wisconsin
Education Association Council.
The governors budget plan recognizes that every kid in every Wisconsin community deserves a great school, said WEAC President Stan Johnson. Even in grim economic times, we cannot ignore the need to provide classrooms that work for children throughout Wisconsin. Cutting education would harm the entire state, because great schools benefit everyone: children, parents, grandparents, businesses, and taxpayers.
The governor's plan protects K-12 education funding
and proposes to address the state's $1.117 billion deficit largely by
phasing out $1 billion in shared revenue payments to cities, counties,
villages and towns over three years while restricting their ability
to raise property taxes. It also calls for borrowing $794 million from
the tobacco settlement money and cutting state agency budgets.
The governor's plan now goes to the Legislature, where
Republicans are proposing to freeze state spending and reduce the state's
overall commitment to fund two-thirds of school operating costs. Johnson
said those legislative Republican plans would endanger the high quality
of education in Wisconsin public schools.
Local school boards would be forced to cut programs
and staff in Wisconsins great schools, Johnson said. These
shortsighted plans would cause long-term damage to schools, children,
and our economy. The long-term growth of Wisconsins economy demands
this kind of investment in our public schools.
Johnson called on the Legislature to agree with the governor and prioritize support for public schools and pass a budget as soon as possible.
Posted January 22, 2002