#NCGA: McCrory, Tillis, media gang up on Senate Republicans in budget fight
In budget reconciliation talks, the Senate has backed away from their insistence on dropping teacher tenure in exchange for pay raises. Smelling blood, Gov. Pat, Speaker Thom, and the drive-by media are pushing for even more:
[…] School superintendents from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school district as well as Cumberland and Dare counties said the cut to teacher assistants would cost hundreds of jobs in the bigger districts and hurt the schools’ ability to meet the requirement that most children read at grade level before being promoted to fourth grade.
House negotiators asked them to speak Wednesday during the hour of morning negotiation time that the House controlled. Senate Republicans objected, saying speakers other than budget negotiators were not allowed unless agreed to by both sides.
“This isn’t your committee meeting,” said Sen. Harry Brown, chief budget negotiator for his chamber, told Rep. Nelson Dollar, the chief House negotiator. “You decided you were going to be the rule maker of this committee. The Senate isn’t going to allow that to happen.”
Dollar said it made sense to have public input during public meetings.
Gov. Pat McCrory, weighed in on the walk-out Wednesday afternoon while speaking at a meeting of his education cabinet at Shaw University.
“I was extremely disappointed that members of the Senate walked out on our superintendents and our teachers,” McCrory said. “I don’t think that’s the appropriate way to have dialogue with our educators and show respect to our educators.”
The testimony has already happened during all of the pre-floor vote committee hearings. Conference committees are all about the two chambers ironing out the differences between their respective pieces of legislation. Opening up these discussions to the public is great. But public testimony in this process is unprecedented. There had been no agreement with the Senate. Speaker Thom and his boys just did it. There is no media outrage over acting outside of the rules. Why? House Republican leaders are pushing the big government line favored by the media and their Democrat allies
More from the drive-bys:
[…] The Senate proposal would eliminate funding for more than 7,000 assistants in second and third grades. The House keeps the funds. The Senate wants to spend unused teacher assistant money on higher teacher pay raises than the House offered. […]
Ah. We’re STILL pushing the meme that Phil Berger and Jerry Tillman are personally deciding whether Miss Smith at Flat Rock Elementary School will get a classroom aide. In reality, legislators budget a bundle of money based on requests from the public education sector. Mad about personnel decisions? Talk to your local superintendent and school board.
Let’s check out what the educrats’ personnel decisions have wrought:
[…] The problem with education spending in North Carolina is not that there’s too little money to go around, however. The state spends approximately $9,000 per student, which is well below the national average of $13,000, but well above the lowest-spending state, Utah, at $6,000. Multiply that by the ratio of teachers to students in North Carolina, which is a teacher-pleasing one to just below fourteen, and you get $126,000 per teacher to spend. That’s more than enough for a nice salary and benefits package, especially in the school districts around Raleigh, which spend an extra thousand or two per pupil above the state average.
It’s also about four times more than a North Carolina teacher with up to five years of experience makes. The state teacher salary schedule, which local districts usually supplement and does not include benefits, puts a teacher with five or less years of experience at a $30,800 annual salary. Teacher pay maxes out in the schedule at $53,180 for someone with 36 years of experience or more. The average local salary supplement is approximately $3,500 per teacher.
So where does the rest of the money go? Well, there’s overhead. And boy, do North Carolina schools have overhead. For starters, North Carolina schools employ almost as many school administrators as they do teachers. The ratio of students to administrators is 1 to 15. While student enrollment increased 36 percent between 1992 and 2009, the number of non-teaching school staff increased almost twice as much: 61 percent, according to the Friedman Foundation. If administrative growth had just matched student enrollment over those years, every teacher could have received a $5,650 pay hike every year.
Some of this astonishing bureaucratic growth can be attributed, as in this Harvard University study, to a lack of market pressure on schools. Study coauthor Eric Hanushek says schools typically don’t make tough but necessary financial choices because they don’t lose money or market share for bad financial or educational management, unlike private enterprises.
As if to reinforce Hanushek’s point, Raleigh-area Durham County schools spent $3.5 million in federal Race to the Top (RTT) funds not on teacher salaries, but on iPads. You know, the same tool Los Angeles schools will spend $1 billion on but can’t figure why? Technology may be cool, but its record of improving K-12 education so far is, at best, spotty. […]
Will McCrory and Tillis now turn and attack conservatives now and send out mailers claining conservatives are racists as the Republican establishment did in Mississippi? Somethings not quite “right” about those two.
I dont mind the de-coupling of tenure and pay raises. *shrug* Not really a big deal since I didnt think it should have been tied together in the first place.
While I’m opposed to “tenure” as a policy, I’m also of a mind that if you commit to such an arrangement with your employees, you keep your word and follow through on it. Teachers who “have” tenure… keep it if they want, no need to unduly punish them for that choice. Sure, offer them incentives to switch to a non-tenure system… whatever.
All new teachers, or teachers that were just starting out though? Nope, it’s a bad system and should not be an option.
But, if you cant find something to cut in the NC budget that’s $21.1 billion, even in just the education bucket… maybe you’re doing it wrong 🙂 You want new spending? Cut something – take your pick.
Also, once again, Tillis acts like a child and a bully.
I’ve noticed something.
The only people calling McCrory and Tillis “Conservative” are them, their supporters, and Progressives.
McCrory and Tillis and Progressives work hard AGAINST Conservatives.
When will Conservatives start calling McCrory and Tillis by their real name (Progressives) and start working against them?
Tillis has been in trouble with conservative voters, and could have used this legislative session to boost his conservative creds, which were pretty nonexistent, but instead is now widening the gap with conservatives. That does not bode well for Tillis getting conservative votes in November, and he will only have himself to blame for it.
I’m a Republican and a conservative and I’ll be doing everything to elect Anyone But Tillis, even Hagan, while unfortunate even her over Tillis.
Both Tillis and McCrory have lost the trust of the Republican base. Conservatives don’t have any faith in either of them. We do trust the Senate to hold the conservative line.
Thillis is toast in November. I am working on changing my voter affiliation. NONE of these Progressive Republicans will EVVVER get my vote.
If Republicans take the Senate, we are certain to have full-blown amnesty and massive increases in foreign workers even faster than anything the Democrats could deliver. And, amnesty pushers like Rove and the Chamber of Commerce know they can count on Tillis.
As such, I really hope the GOP does not win the Senate.
Tillis’ silence on the current invasion of our country from Central America is telling. Is he letting Rove and the Chamber set his issue positions? He might want to look at Rove’s track record on Senate races – losing 10 of the 12 he has been involved in. It looks like Rove is on his way to number11 in North Carolina. Why, oh why, did North Carolina let Rove buy our nomination for Tillis?