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New report shows state budget cuts devastating public schools

Posted: 10/13/2011 10:40:43 AM

New austerity budgets, passed by state legislatures, are having a huge negative effect on direct services to children, youth, and families, according to a new report by Campaign for America’s Future. 

The report, “Starving America’s Public Schools: How Budget Cuts and Policy Mandates are Hurting our Nation’s Students,” compiles data from local news reports across the country. The report focuses on five key states that have flaunted budget cuts to K-12 public education: Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

The five states have reduced or eliminated crucial services, such as pre-kindergarten, full-day kindergarten, technical education and foreign language courses, art, music and physical education. Several of the states also have increased class sizes. In each state, the report documents dwindling public school funds being transferred to private entities, such as private schools and voucher programs. 

From the NEA:

“We know what our students need to learn and succeed – including early childhood education, smaller class sizes and a well-rounded curriculum,” said NEA President Dennis Van Roekel. “Americans must demand that our elected leaders use our tax dollars to help build a solid future for all our children and our nation by providing adequate funding for our public schools and helping all our students get the education they deserve.”

“In community after community, I came across clear signs that our schools are in dire straits,” said report author and education blogger Jeff Bryant. “At a time when the world is changing so rapidly and globalization is opening so many new possibilities for the next generation, why are our public schools being forced to shrink the learning opportunities available to our children?"

Campaign for America’s Future co-Director Robert L. Borosage called on Washington to wake up to the damage being done across the country. “The debate in Washington too often ignores the carnage suffered by schools and children from budget cuts across the country. Instead of ensuring that schools are protected from the budget squeeze caused by the economic collapse, Washington is more focused on the old debate over testing and standards. Meanwhile, states are cutting back early childhood education, increasing class sizes and cutting back everything from advanced placement to music and art education. These cuts not only add to the downturn, they endanger the education that everyone agrees our children deserve.” 

Examples of how our children are paying the price:  

  • In Pennsylvania: In Chester Upland, 40 percent of the teachers were eliminated, with class sizes rising from 21 to 30 in elementary schools and to 35 in high schools. And in York, art, music and physical education classes were eliminated in elementary schools.
  • Arizona ranks sixth among states in the amount of public school funds being funneled to private schools. The state redirects $61 million per year through individual, corporate, and other kinds of tax credit programs. Florida ranks first, redirecting $229 million per year through voucher and corporate tax credit programs.
  • Florida has cut more than $1 billion from education in its new budget for 2011–12, an almost 8 percent drop that translates to a loss of $542 per student.
  • Overriding the governor’s veto, the North Carolina General Assembly approved a 2011 budget that cut $800 million in education funding. The state ranked 47th in spending per pupil in the country in 2010 and likely will slip to 49th in 2011.

To read stories from NEA members on how budget cuts are affecting their schools, including those in Wisconsin, click here.

Comments 2

  1. Jerry M 10/30/2011

    First they wanted creationism in schools. Couldn't get that. Then they changed the name to 'intelligent design', which didn't fool anyone, and even claimed they had a theory. Yeah, a theory. They just skipped right over the hypothesis part and left out the testable and  falsifiable parts and just went directly to a theory. That didn't fly. The next plan? To divert money for public education to religious schools where they can control the curricula.

    Results: Massive underfunding for public education. Firing teachers. Dropping many of the humanities and art programs. Schools unable to do their job. Now they claim the public education is failing. Of course it is. That is the plan.

    Their answer: Using taxpayer money to fund religious schools. Now the next generation of children will be indoctrinated in religion for their entire lives along with a hefty dose of revisionist history by Barton and his kind. A whole generation of religious zealots that can write their names and answer 'goddidit' to every question.

    These repubs/baggers/right-wingers are destroying the future of America. There is no way to compete in a future that will be based on technology when you indoctrinate children to believe the earth is 6,000 years old and children saddled and rode dinosaurs.

    I cannot fathom how anybody can be so blinded by zealotry and greed. Belief that wealth is the ticket to the airline to heaven and the end of the earth is imminent will turn America into a 3rd world nation. The only good I see is the fact I have no children  that will live in this hell. What I cannot wrap my head around is how they fool so many into voting against their own future, and their children's futures, so the rich can get richer and the zealots get control of their children's education.
  2. Joy Drennen 10/29/2011

    The Koch brothers, with their billions, are undercutting public education wherever they can.  And the GOP is bowing to them as their corporate masters.  Next, of course, they will be deciding the curriculum - in all the schools they can touch, be they private, religious, or public.

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