Near the tipping point in funding fight
Dianne Harman
My husband, Assemblyman Tom Harman, and I recently attended a rally
that was held at Sowers Middle School in Huntington Beach. Parents
and students held the rally to protest the closure of Kettler School
located in the Huntington Beach City School District.
If you think no one cares about education-funding issues in this
state, try telling that to the 400 or so concerned parents who
attended the rally. I was really impressed that the rally was
organized on only three days’ notice.
In that short time, the organizers arranged to have professional
signs donated by local real estate agents, printed T-shirts and
successfully got two TV stations, as well as members of the press, to
attend the event.
To say that these parents are angry and upset would be the
understatement of the year.
Among other things, they are angry about school closures, the
elimination of librarians and school nurses, as well as the
governor’s proposed suspension of Proposition 98, the constitutional
guarantee that provides funding to schools throughout the state.
T-shirts were worn by a majority of those in attendance indicating
their support of Proposition 98 and opposing the governor’s broken
promise to repay the $2 billion he cut from education funding last
year.
The bottom line of all the rhetoric (by the way, both sides on
this issue have conflicting facts and figures) is that last year the
education coalition agreed to a $2-billion cut in education funding
in order to help the state of California weather its budget crisis.
That was to be a one-time only cut. The education community, which
includes parents, teachers and school boards, is angry with the
governor, not only because he broke his promise but also because he
has proposed to take away from the schools an additional $2.3 billion
that they are entitled to under Proposition 98. This means that the
schools will not only lose the original $2 billion but also any
increase the schools are entitled to receive due to increasing state
revenues.
Parents are vehement in their feelings that the state budget
should not be balanced on the backs of the children of this state.
Rallies such as the one in Huntington Beach are being held up and
down the state in opposition to the governor’s proposed cuts to
education. Without the necessary funding from the state, many more
schools will be closed.
So what is the cause of this problem? Is the governor solely
responsible for this crisis in education? The answer to those
questions are not easy.
Yes, the governor’s cuts to education are part of the problem, but
there are other factors that have caused this situation to develop.
Declining enrollments in many schools is a major problem. Every
school receives from the state approximately $4,500 per year for each
student that attends that particular school. As enrollments decline,
schools lose a major source of funding.
Then there is the problem of skyrocketing costs related to special
education. Everyone agrees that the requirements of students with
special needs have to be fully and adequately funded; however, it has
become apparent that the cost of providing these services to a
limited number of students has gotten completely out of hand. In some
school districts, special-education costs now amount to nearly 10% of
the entire school district budget.
So what is the solution to the crisis in education funding? Should
we support or oppose the governor’s proposed cuts to education
funding? What about Proposition 98? Should it remain as a
constitutional guarantee for education funding? That means it will be
on autopilot, and almost all of the increases in future state
revenues will go for education to the exclusion of other needs such
as healthcare, transportation and the environment.
There are no easy answers to any of these questions.
However, I recently read a book by Malcolm Gladwell, called “The
Tipping Point,” that might help answer these questions. The premise
of the book is that “when an idea, trend or social behavior crosses a
threshold,” something tips; and when that happens, a movie becomes a
hit, a book a bestseller, or some new fashion concept is deemed to be
“in.”
If the rally held in Huntington Beach is a sign of things to come,
I think we may have arrived at a tipping point in California as it
relates to school funding.
* DIANNE HARMAN is the wife of Assemblyman Tom Harman, 67th
Assembly District. She is a candidate for his seat in the Legislature
in the June 2006 primary election. To contribute to “Sounding Off”
e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714) 966-4667.
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