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For Immediate
Release
6/19/08
Statement by Senate Appropriations Chairman Gib
Armstrong
on State Education Funding
The dire warnings and made-up numbers issued by the state Education
Department yesterday are irresponsible and indefensible. State education
officials need to climb down from their ivory tower and learn a little something
about economic reality.
It is impossible to deal with the drop-off in state revenues,
hold the line on state taxes, meet all the mandated costs across other state
responsibilities, and still give an outsized increase to education. The math
does not work.
Governor Rendell's proposed 6% increase for basic education was
an arbitrary number. It was presented in February with good intentions, but in
June there is no longer sufficient money to pay for it.
Based on what has been said during news conferences and constituent visits in
recent weeks, there is probably not a program in the state budget where the
advocates are happy with the proposed funding. It is doubtful there is much
support for cutting everything else to sustain this big increase for education.
If the Rainy Day Fund is raided now to pay for the high level of
spending the Administration is insisting on, how will the money be found next
year to pay for a comparable increase atop it, when nearly every economic
forecast projects the revenue problem to be much worse?
The public does not believe there is a magical spending number
that guarantees academic achievement, nor do they believe that a still
substantial 3.5% increase will bring academic progress to a crashing halt. Only
in the fantasy world of government figuring would someone call a 3.5% increase
"cut and gut."
There is one other statistic that plays into this debate. State
education spending has gone up 40% during the Rendell years, with bipartisan
legislative support. Hard to make a convincing case that school districts are
being starved of state funding.
Individuals, families, businesses, non-profit institutions, and
the rest are tightening their budgets and controlling their expenses because of
the troubled economy. They expect state government to do the same thing. They
do not want us to compound the problem by driving up spending when revenues are
going in the other direction.
Contact:
David Atkinson
(717) 787-6535
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