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wildcard
21st April 2010, 10:10 PM
Awww.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/21/education/21teachers.html?scp=1&sq=school%20districts&st=cse

Districts Warn of Deeper Teacher Cuts


By TAMAR LEWIN and SAM DILLON
Published: April 20, 2010


School districts around the country, forced to resort to drastic money-saving measures, are warning hundreds of thousands of teachers that their jobs may be eliminated in June.

The districts have no choice, they say, because their usual sources of revenue — state money and local property taxes — have been hit hard by the recession. In addition, federal stimulus money earmarked for education has been mostly used up this year.

As a result, the 2010-11 school term is shaping up as one of the most austere in the last half century. In addition to teacher layoffs, districts are planning to close schools, cut programs, enlarge classes and shorten the school day, week or year to save money.

“We are doing things and considering options I never thought I’d have to consider,” said Peter C. Gorman, superintendent of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools in North Carolina, who expects to cut 600 of the district’s 9,400 teachers this year, after laying off 120 last year. “This may be our new economic reality.”

Districts in California have given pink slips to 22,000 teachers. Illinois authorities are predicting 17,000 job cuts in the public schools. And New York has warned nearly 15,000 teachers that their jobs could disappear in June.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan estimated that state budget cuts imperiled 100,000 to 300,000 public school jobs. In an interview on Monday, he said the nation was flirting with “education catastrophe,” and urged Congress to approve additional stimulus funds to save school jobs.

“We absolutely see this as an emergency,” Mr. Duncan said.

Everywhere, school officials tend to overestimate the potential for layoffs at this time of year, to ensure that every employee they might have to dismiss receives the required notifications.

Whether the current estimates rise or fall will depend in part on labor negotiations under way in hundreds of districts, and on how taxpayers vote on school levy proposals in many states and towns. But those adjustments will affect the likely layoff numbers only at the margins.

Some of the deepest cuts are in Los Angeles, where Superintendent Ramon C. Cortines sent notices to 5,200 of the district’s 80,000 employees last month, telling them that they were losing their jobs.

“I’ve been superintendent in five major school districts, and had responsibility for cuts for years — but not this magnitude, not this devastating,” Mr. Cortines said.

And there is no end in sight, he said. He cut his district’s $12 billion budget this school year by $1 billion, has prepared $600 million in cuts for the term beginning in the fall and is looking ahead to a deficit for the following year of $263 million.

“I don’t see this being over in the year 2014-15,” Mr. Cortines added.

In the economic stimulus bill passed in February 2009, Congress appropriated about $100 billion in emergency education financing. States spent much of that in the current fiscal year, saving more than 342,000 school jobs, about 5.5 percent of all the positions in the nation’s 15,000 school systems, according to a study by the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington.

States will spend about $36 billion of the stimulus money in the next fiscal year, leaving their budgets short by some $144 billion, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning research group.

About a quarter of all state spending goes to public schools, said Jon Shure, a state fiscal expert at the center, so without new aid, the continuing job losses will add to the nation’s employment woes.

Warning of an educational emergency, Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, proposed a $23 billion school bailout bill last Wednesday that would essentially provide more education stimulus financing to stave off the looming wave of school layoffs.

“This is not something we can fix in August,” said Mr. Harkin, chairman of the Senate education committee. “We have to fix it now.”

Michael J. Petrilli, who served in the Education Department under President George W. Bush, predicted that the bill could attract significant support. But even if it is approved, Mr. Petrilli said, it would leave an underlying problem unresolved.

“Is the federal government going to try to prop up states and districts forever?” he said. “If not, we’re just kicking the can down the road. Eventually, districts need to learn to live with less.”

Senior Democratic aides said that because Mr. Harkin’s bill would add to the deficit, it was unlikely to pass.

A survey by the American Association of School Administrators found that 9 of 10 superintendents expected to lay off school workers for the fall, up from two of three superintendents last year. The survey also found that the percentage considering a four-day school week had jumped to 13 percent, from 2 percent a year ago.

...

Story continues at link.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/21/education/21teachers.html?scp=1&sq=school%20districts&st=cse

Book
21st April 2010, 10:23 PM
http://pobeptsworld.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/stupid_kids.jpg

Good. Public schools are now retard factories.

:oo-->

wildcard
21st April 2010, 10:24 PM
ZOG indoctrination centers must be kept open!

skid
21st April 2010, 10:27 PM
A teacher I know was recently informed he wouldn't be hired back in Sept. This is in Washington State.

cigarlover
21st April 2010, 10:36 PM
Maybe the states could reduce pay for all state employees like the rest of the economy???

Horn
21st April 2010, 10:41 PM
Maybe the states could reduce pay for all state employees like the rest of the economy???


That's deflationary, the human mind has been programmed otherwise.

No, they will go in search of jobs for 1/2 the pay. :oo-->

Ponce
21st April 2010, 10:49 PM
The only future education that I foresee for the kids is the one for war.....no need to learn when the government will pay you for the rest of your short life.

silver_surfer
22nd April 2010, 05:36 AM
It kills me how teacher feel that they shouldn't have to take pay cuts. Everyone else in the communities that are paying there salary probally has in the last year or two. But somehow the union feel that they shouldn't.

jaybone
22nd April 2010, 06:09 AM
Well, this might at least be good for the private school industry,
Kinda hard to compete with a monopoly.
I use the example of Microsoft,
sure there is Apple, and Linux, but how many operating system choices would there be if there was no mister softy?
And the competition would likely result in a product vastly superior to what we have now.

Most of my family are teachers or professors, and pretty good ones too.
They would probably be making double what they are now on a free market system where people are free to choose and PAY FOR the education they want their own kids to have, instead of being forced into the puppy mill.

jaybone
22nd April 2010, 06:13 AM
It kills me how teacher feel that they shouldn't have to take pay cuts. Everyone else in the communities that are paying there salary probally has in the last year or two. But somehow the union feel that they shouldn't.


Nobody gives up pay willingly,
I understand that they feel they have to fight for what they have been promised.
But in the end, it is going to be a full fledged taxpayer revolt or massive layoffs if they don't play ball.
In NJ, it is turning into a public and bitter war between the Governor and unions, more school budgets were voted down Tuesday than in the last 40 years.

I took a rather giant pay cut about a year ago, I knew the options were take it or hit the road, but I made a hell of a stink. I asked my boss for a letter of recommendation, asked for a written job description and told him I would not do one thing not listed.

It is the way of the porcupine; make it unpalatable to mess with me, even though in the end I am defenseless, at least in this job market I am.

Twisted Titan
22nd April 2010, 09:53 AM
It kills me how teacher feel that they shouldn't have to take pay cuts. Everyone else in the communities that are paying there salary probally has in the last year or two. But somehow the union feel that they shouldn't.



Revenge is a dish best served cold........

This one will be piping hot.

Its a funny thing when Justice shows up for her dew

cigarlover
22nd April 2010, 10:33 AM
If we could just reduce the number of politicians in federal and state gov for about 5 years we could balance this budget and end all this inflated spending on everything. Instead we have to wait for the rest of the world to stop lending to us. Looks like maybe that will be faster in the end, who knows. In any event, a depression is coming and the Gov is only making it worse.