Will Federal Stimulus Money Help Local Education?
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger assures California's school districts that the answer is yes, but some people doubt he'll be able to ride out looming state budget crises without educational cuts.
The Los Angeles Times reports today:
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has assured members of California's congressional delegation that the state will not use federal economic stimulus money earmarked for education to backfill the state's looming budget gap....
But some educators fear that the declarations may go by the wayside if the state's finances decline further. The state is already projected to be $8 billion in the red next year, and if several funding propositions on the May ballot aren't approved by voters, that figure could nearly double.
"Our concern is with the state of California's budget, the May election and the June [budget] revise, they're going to come back behind the federal dollars and cut state spending on education, and the net [result] is we're going to lose out," said Matt Hill, an official with the Los Angeles Unified School District. The district is weighing layoffs of more than 8,500 employees to cut nearly $600 million from next year's budget.
The feds, meanwhile, say they won't put up with such shenanigans from Sacramento:
Federal officials have grown increasingly concerned in recent weeks that several states facing budget shortfalls would circumvent the intent of the more than $100-billion education package, with U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan warning that he would "come down like a ton of bricks" on any state that defied him.
"We're holding back literally billions of dollars for the second round of funding," he said when he released the first installment, of $44 billion, last week. "States that aren't doing the right thing will basically eliminate themselves from competition."
Somewhat ironically, the Daily News meanwhile reports today that staff at the LA USD office responsible for getting money from the state and the feds are getting axed:
Just when Los Angeles Unified officials need their advice the most, the men and women who help the district secure funding from Sacramento and Washington, D.C., are being laid off to cut costs.
LAUSD's Government Relations Office - staffers with expert knowledge on government funding for schools - is being cut to three people from 11.
The office has been busy reading through federal documents ensuring that district staff understands how much federal stimulus money they should be receiving, how they can properly distribute it, and how they can compete for future pots of cash.....
The district has been under pressure to reduce its bureaucracy in the face of a $718 million deficit that is expected to grow...."Yes, the government relations office is far from the classroom, but it routinely brings in millions," said Scott Folsom, a longtime parent advocate. "It's a return on a investment."
Past City of Angles blogging on LA USD's money troubles.
The image associated with this post was taken by Flickr user Dave Malkoff. It was used under user Creative Commons license.
jay mckim says :
School teacher union only want to pay good salary first. They don't care about their result of their work. I'm not gonna buy their argument saying that how they care about education most. Look at the majority of the students attending in LAUSD. High percentage of school-drop out rate. Gang. Drug. Toilet school. There is a certain race and ethnic group who can't be educated. I don't like put down some race/ethnic group but it is truth. Why is that most good school not only in LAUSD but many other school districts are attended by Asians? Asians students happen to be highest achieving student than any other race. Why is that? I saw a TV program about special prodigy school in PBS and what I saw was most students are Asians.
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eigen says :
I think the short answer is "It had better!" Can the state pick and choose how it uses money that's been earmarked for a specific purpose?