Wednesday, January 13, 2010

MDUSD Budget Disaster—COLA to Blame

I couldn't believe what I was hearing at last night's School Board meeting. The $17 million in cuts was horrifying enough. We (teachers and parents) were up in arms about the proposed class size minimum of 28 students, believing that it would kill some AP and Honors classes at some sites. We (parents) were distressed that we would not be able to pay to have our child bused to school. Librarians, music, special education, textbook adoption, custodial services, and the list goes on and on. All of these proposed budget reductions were proposed to meet a $17 million deficit by the 2011-2012 school year.

And then there was the news that $17 million was not enough. Actually, the number was more like $35.5 million.

I'll pause while you try to digest that number.

Pause.

Pause.

I was all the more shocked to hear the horrible news because our, um, esteemed Gubinator had released a revised budget on Friday, January 8th, assuring the public there were no cuts to education. So what happened? If there were no cuts, why did the MDUSD budget shortfall leap from $17 to $35.5 million?

Turns out that there is a negative COLA (Cost of Living Adjustment). School districts get paid per student based on the COLA rate. If I understand this correctly, since the COLA has gone down, funding has also gone down. Can't you just see the Governor's budget and media people, jumping with glee when it was discovered that the COLA was down? What a spin! Now they could honestly tell the public that there were not additional cuts to education, the subtext being that they were compassionate individuals. Of course, there didn't have to be cuts because districts would already be receiving less.

I've never been great at math, but isn't that kind of the same thing as a cut?

So what exactly is there left to cut? How can school sites possibly be reorganized, heck, even redone, in order to weather this economic catastrophe?

Last night the Board voted to have school sites come up with possible solutions around the issue of minimum class size. I appreciate the Board making an effort to work with teachers and parents, instead of just making a cold decision that could adversely affect some sites and not others. It is important to receive input so that everyone is heard. Unfortunately, there has already been an unintended, negative consequence. I was floored to hear the conversations in the hall today—teachers suggesting which classes should be cut (not their own, of course), office staff adding in their two cents. The issue of summer school came up and the merits of providing this last opportunity for students who essentially 'choose' to fail. Inevitably the challenges of servicing the immigrant population in our community was raised. And it was not raised in a flattering manner.

We are all experts on what works and does not work at our school site. The community seems to know best when it comes to what teachers should and should not sacrifice (try telling a 2nd grade teacher who had a 50% increase in class size that teachers have not given their share in during this budget crisis!). But this expertise and this 'knowing what's best' for a site, does not make us the best decision makers. Really, what we experience for 90% of the school day is what goes on only in our classroom or only in the office. Everything else is hearsay.

Bottom line is that people are scared. People are overwhelmed. And asking school sites to make these recommendations is unfair as it has the potential to put us at each other's throats. Given all the added stress resulting from last year's cuts and the uncertainty of the future, we need to be one another's strongest support.

What can we do to salvage our students' education and still be a sane, safe community at the end of day?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Times are bad and getting worse. This is where we really have a chance to look in the mirror and discover who we are. Solutions that focus on blame rather than concrete and realistic steps to allieviate the crisis will only tear us apart. I do not advocate standing mute, nor do I advocate ignoring the structural problems that continue to send us into a death spiral. However, those are long term and statewide issues. While workiing on those, we mustn't sit on the sidelines, idle. We are ready to hear ideas. Please try to keep them real and sustainable. We are working with our peers to find solutions. When we figure out some posibilites, listen, consider and discuss before you react.

Anita Johnson said...

To even involve oneself in these "conversations" is to be complicit in the crime that is being perpetrated on our children. If someone asks me to offer a suggestion, I will use the opportunity to remind them that California is a wealthy state - we can educate our children well if we chose to do so. Those who have power in this state are neglecting the children. Neglect is a form of child abuse.

Imagine if they passed a law requiring that children be taught in school how to smoke cigarettes. Would you comply?

Wrong is wrong, no matter what propoganda you believe about the economy.

Teri Cooper said...

Real and sustainable, good point. Will public education be sustainable after all the cuts.
The Governor talks wants reform, but is strangling with current system his idea of reform?

Silent No More said...

Do you know that the Board of Education is recklessly spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer money without public knowledge? They have already runup almost $4,000,000 in costs that should never have been expended. They continue to propose cuts to the educational program and to reduce teacher’s salaries in the public forum while they make decisions to spend more money behind closed doors in Closed Session. Go to www.MDUSDexposed.blogspot.com to find out what they haven’t told you.