CALIFORNIA STATE PTA
LEGISLATION ACTION ALERT
_________________________________________
DATE: January 11, 2008
Governor Proposes Drastic Budget Cuts
for Students –
The Children of California Need Your
Help
IMMEDIATE Action Needed:
Voice PTA’s strong opposition to the Governor’s
K-12 education budget proposal.
- Email or call your State Assembly member or Senator right
away!
Message: PTA urges legislators not to cut Proposition
98, the minimum public education funding guarantee for our
students. The impact of the unprecedented cuts proposed
in the Governor’s budget would severely harm each and
every school.
Find
Your Legislators
Or paste this into your browser:
http://www.capwebworks.com/addresslookup/lookup.aspx
- Forward this alert to others to generate the largest response
possible.
- Advise the PTA Legislation Team about your contacts and
responses received at legislation@capta.org
- Be ready for additional information from California State
PTA. This is the first action in what we expect to be a
multi-pronged effort to protect funding for our students.
BACKGROUND
On Thursday, January 10, Governor Schwarzenegger released
his state budget proposal. The proposal seeks to address the
state’s estimated $14 billion deficit by making the
largest reduction to education funding in California history.
For 2008-09, the Governor proposes that the Legislature suspend
Proposition 98 (the minimum funding guarantee for schools)
and cut $4.4 billion (more than 9%) in education funds.
The Governor also proposes $400 million in education funding
reductions in the current 2007-08 budget year.
While we are still analyzing the details, the proposal calls
for:
- $2.6 billion in cuts by eliminating the statutory 4.94%
Cost-of-Living-Increase (COLA) for schools, and reducing
the revenue limit allocation by an additional 2%. This would
create a combined “deficit factor” (money that
is statutorily owed to schools as part of Proposition 98)
by a total of $2.6 billion, or nearly 7%.
- $1.1 billion in cuts by reducing categorical programs
funding, including reductions to the Class Size Reduction
program, Instructional Materials, Transportation, Supplemental
School Counselors, and many others.
- $360 million in cuts by eliminating the COLA and “growth”
funding for special education, as well as additional cuts
to special education, which is already chronically underfunded.
- $200 million in cuts by eliminating COLA and growth funding
for child development programs (nearly $200 million), which
would eliminate nearly 8,000 existing child care slots.
- Reductions in funding for community colleges, as well
as University of California and California State University.
* * *
On behalf of California State PTA, President Pam Brady issued
the following statement this morning:
Statement on the Proposed 2008-2009 Budget
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE—Sacramento, California, January
11, 2008
Pam Brady, President of the California State PTA, issued
the following statement in response to the Governor's budget
proposal:
"The proposed California State budget flunks the basic
test of good government: It hurts our children. A budget is
a reflection of our community values. This budget does not
value the education, health, or welfare of our children and
the future of California.
"Members of the California State PTA are offended by
the failure of the proposed budget to meet the needs of children.
The Legislature and the Governor have a responsibility to
support the children of California. Any mid-year cuts or suspension
of Proposition 98, which provides minimum funding for our
schools, is unacceptable.
"We don't move toward Twenty-First Century education
by going backwards. It is ironic that the highly touted 'Year
of Education' is starting out as the year they tried to take
billions of dollars away from our children."
The California State PTA is a branch of the 110-year
old National PTA, with over a million members statewide. The
PTA is the nation's oldest, largest and highest-profile volunteer
organization working on behalf of public schools, children
and families, with the motto "Every child, one voice."
PTA volunteers work in their schools and communities to improve
the education, health and welfare of all California children
and youth. The PTA also advocates at national, state and local
levels for education and family issues. The PTA is non-profit,
non-partisan, non-sectarian and non-commercial. For more information,
go to www.capta.org.
###
CALIFORNIA EDUCATION COALITION
STATE BUDGET TALKING POINTS
- California State PTA will be working with the Education
Coalition to inform legislators and the public about the
severity of the proposed budget cuts. Below are some initial
Talking Points that you may utilize in addition to the points
emphasized in California State PTA’s statement.
- While it is clear there are extraordinary challenges in
balancing the state’s budget, the Education Coalition
strongly opposes the Governor’s 2008-09 budget proposal
and his plans to eviscerate Proposition 98. Our students
and schools did not create this budget problem, and their
progress shouldn’t be undermined because of it.
- The governor’s budget reductions would be disastrous
to public schools and they are fundamentally inconsistent
with the state’s goal of improving student achievement.
A $4.4 billion cut to Prop. 98 would mean laying off tens
of thousands of teachers and would also result in increases
in class size throughout the state, not to mention a further
erosion of the support system for students provided by classified
and paraprofessional staff.
- Voters passed Prop. 98 almost 20 years ago to ensure our
students and schools receive minimum funding. They strongly
reaffirmed their support for the minimum funding law in
2005. Proposals to suspend Prop. 98 conflict with the will
of the voters and jeopardize the minimum education funding
levels Prop. 98 provides for students and schools.
- According to a report released this week from Education
Week, California spends $2,000 less per student than the
national average. Other recent studies have shown that California
seriously under funds its public schools, with New York
spending 75 percent more than California. The “Getting
Down to Facts” studies show that billions more would
be necessary to ensure the opportunity for all students
to meet the state’s rigorous academic standards. In
addition, California has some of the most overcrowded classrooms
as well as the greatest shortage of librarians, counselors
and other critical support staff in the nation.
- Experts including the Fordham Foundation (one of the nation's
leading proponents of rigorous academic standards), the
Public Policy Institute of California, EdSource and researchers
at Stanford University all confirm that California's K-12
academic and performance standards are among the most challenging
in the nation. With hard work, modest investments in teacher
training and the adoption of standards-aligned textbooks,
our students and schools have been making progress. Reading
scores are up 25 percent and math scores have increased
17 percent in the last four years. This progress cannot
continue with these proposed cuts to our public schools.
- A state budget proposal that looks at cuts alone is not
a real solution, because it doesn’t address California’s
underlying problem of inadequate and unstable revenue sources.
We cannot talk about spending cuts without also talking
about increasing revenues.
- The most pressing challenge is to enact a balanced budget
that continues the momentum of educational improvement that
has been built since the late 1990s. This budget does not
do that and anything less is unacceptable.
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