Archive for category State Budget Advocacy

Radio Spot with President-Elect Carol Kocivar

California State PTA President-Elect Carol Kocivar was featured this morning on KQED Radio’s Perspectives program, in which she eloquently shares PTA’s position on the budget cuts to education and on how parents should get involved as the new school year begins.

From all of us at 17th District PTA, have a safe and healthy start to the school year!

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State PTA Statement on New Budget Deal

Shortsighted Budget Jeopardizes State’s Future
PTA President Urges Balance and Investment in Children

SACRAMENTO – California State PTA President Jo Loss issued the following response to news of the pending budget agreement.

“California State PTA and our nearly 1 million members have serious concerns with the long-lasting negative impact this budget will have on children and families in California.

“We recognize the state is facing an unprecedented fiscal crisis, but we are angered that our legislative leaders are choosing to solve the budget primarily with cuts to critical services, rather than identifying sufficient sources of new, ongoing revenue to provide a more balanced approach.

“Legislators and the Governor should not continue to try to balance the budget on the backs of our children and families. Our message remains constant: We must invest in children to ensure our future economic prosperity.

“The proposed budget cuts $6 billion more from K-12 schools and community colleges. This is in addition to more than $11 billion in cuts our schools and students have suffered over the past year. California’s education system ranks nearly last in the nation in terms of per-student funding, with some of the largest class sizes and the highest number of students per counselor, school nurse or other critical support staff members. Our schools are unable to withstand cuts of this magnitude and continue to provide the quality education that our students need and deserve.

“The budget agreement does include a commitment to restore money lost during this budget crisis – and this is a positive step. However, it is the responsibility of our state legislators to fund public education at all timesat a level where all children are able to learn. This budget fails that test. School districts will be forced to make additional cuts to critical programs. Class sizes will significantly increase, reducing the ability of our teachers to meet the individual needs of each student. Academic support classes, reading specialists, counselors, librarians and school nurses will be lost. We will see fewer arts and music classes. Our ability to provide students with up-to-date technological resources and hands-on science programs to prepare them for the global economy will continue to be jeopardized.

“In addition, the $226 million cuts to the Healthy Families Program places the health and well-being of our state’s neediest children and families in further jeopardy. The $528 million cut in the CalWORKs program similarly hurts these families.

“A budget should reflect the values of our citizens. Californians have consistently supported public education and children in prosperous and unstable economic times. So we must ask, Where are California’s priorities when the basic education and health needs of our children are not being adequately met?”

The California State PTA has nearly 1 million members throughout the state working on behalf of public schools, children and families, with the motto, “Every child, one voice.” The PTA is the nation’s oldest, largest and highest profile volunteer organization working to improve the education, health and welfare of all children and youth. The PTA also advocates at national, state and local levels for education and family issues. The PTA is nonprofit, nonsectarian and noncommercial.

For more information about the California State PTA, visit www.capta.org.

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Budget Alert: What You Can Do

Speak Up for Children and Families

Your help is needed to get the message to state leaders

1) Call your Assembly member, State Senator, and the Governor today to tell them to protect funding for education and critical services for children and families.

Find Your Legislators
Contact the Governor

Sample message:

My name is (your name) from (name of your city). My children attend (names of your childrens’ schools), and I urge (Senator X, Assembly member X, the Governor) to protect funding for education by not suspending Proposition 98.

We must also protect critical programs for children and families such as Healthy Families, CalWORKs and Cal Grants. I strongly believe that we must invest in our children to protect their future and the future of our state.

2) Send letters to the editor at your local newspaper about what is happening in your school as a result of the devastating statewide cuts to education.

For more information on how to submit a letter to the editor and a listing of local newspapers contacts, please visit the “Letters to the Editor” tab on the Education Coalition’s “Protect Our Students” website.

Don’t forget to check your local newspaper for word-count limits, and please remember to include your name, home address and phone number!

San Mateo County newspapers include the San Mateo County Times and the San Mateo Daily Journal.
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Education Coalition Press Release on Proposed Suspension of Prop. 98

EDUCATION COALITION OPPOSES GOVERNOR’S PROPOSAL TO SUSPEND PROP. 98 AND MAKE DEEPER CUTS TO PUBLIC SCHOOLS

The Education Coalition strongly opposes Governor Schwarzenegger’s proposal announced yesterday to suspend Prop. 98, the state’s minimum school funding law, so that he can make deeper cuts to education on top of the $11.6 billion already enacted.

Time and again, Californians have voted to protect Prop. 98 and have overwhelmingly rejected any attempts to undermine the law. Public polls show that voters continue to support increasing funding to our schools, saying it is the last place they want state leaders to cut. And yet, lawmakers have subjected education funding to 60 percent of the cuts made to the state budget. Though there have been many attempts to undermine Prop. 98 over the years, education funding continues to grow at a much slower pace than most other areas of the budget.

Quite, simply, Prop. 98 is not the problem – it’s time for lawmakers to take a balanced approach to solving the state’s budget crisis, instead of shortchanging an entire generation of students of the quality education they deserve.

With public schools already taking the worst funding hit since the Great Depression, the Education Coalition maintains that public schools simply cannot sustain any further cuts, and also supports schools being repaid the funding they are owed under Prop. 98.

Suspending Prop. 98 would further drain basic resources from schools that have already been forced to increase class sizes, cut programs critical to student learning, cancel bus routes and eliminate summer school programs, as well as librarians, counselors and arts and music classes.

California’s students – who already live in a state that ranks 47th in the nation in per-pupil spending – have been subjected to historic, unprecedented cuts. The devastation of these cuts is not only lost jobs right now, but deep, lasting damage to the ability of our children and the state to compete and succeed in the future.

The Education Coalition represents more than 2.5 million teachers, parents, administrators, school board members, school employees and other education advocates in California. For more information, please visit our website at: www.protectourstudents.org.

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State Budget Legislative Alert 6/25/09

The Governor and legislators say the state budget crisis is so bad that we have no choice but to severely cut education and health and welfare services for kids.

They are wrong!

Please e-mail your legislators.

Remind them that their obligation to all of California’s children does not stop when times get tough.

A budget is a reflection of our values. We value the future of our children and the future of California. We understand cuts to education programs will be enacted as part of a budget deficit solution. But the cuts currently being considered are far too deep and will shortchange an entire generation.

To read California State PTA President Pam Brady’s statement on the budget negotiations, click here.

Please call or e-mail your state Assembly member, state Senator and the Governor right away and deliver the following messages:

  • Support a balanced budget approach that includes some additional revenues to prevent even deeper cuts to children’s education programs and services.
  • Support full funding for Healthy Families, CalWORKs and Cal Grants – essential programs that support the health and well-being of children, students and families.

Find Your Legislators | Contact the Governor

The Governor and all legislators need to continue to hear directly from parents and PTAs about the devastating impact that cuts proposed in the state budget will have on children. We know many of you have been contacting legislators; it is vital to remind them that PTAs throughout the state and all parents are watching their actions closely.

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State PTA Press Release: Latest State Budget Proposal Still Fails California’s Children

California State PTA President Pam Brady released the following statement today regarding ongoing state budget deliberations in Sacramento:

“The latest budget proposals put forward by the Governor and the legislative conference committee still fail the basic test of good government: They do not reflect the values of our communities, and they do not put our children first. The magnitude of cuts included in these budget proposals will shortchange an entire generation of students. And today’s students are tomorrow’s workforce. Our state’s economic health in the future depends on the level of support we provide in our classrooms now.

“Legislative leaders who crafted the conference committee plan should be acknowledged for their efforts to take a more balanced approach than the Governor to solving the state’s current budget deficit. The conference committee plan, which did not pass out of the Senate or Assembly yesterday, would have generated some additional revenues to help mitigate cuts and to save essential programs that the Governor proposed to eliminate entirely, such as Healthy Families, CalWORKs and Cal Grants. These programs serve hundreds of thousands of children and students. It is shameful that any state leader in 2009 would even consider eliminating them, especially when our state receives matching dollars from the federal government for operating some of them.”

Education cuts still too deep

“The conference committee plan proposes about $680 million less in cuts to education programs than the Governor’s plan. The conference committee plan also took an important step by recognizing that cuts made to schools in the past two years must be repaid in future years when the economy improves. Again, we acknowledge the efforts of legislative leaders to try to cushion the impact of even deeper cuts on our schoolchildren. In this difficult budget situation, some additional cuts to education will be enacted, but the more than $5 billion in additional cuts proposed for this year and next is still too deep. These cuts come on top of more than $11 billion that has already been cut from schools.

“Children in our classrooms right now deserve better. At a time when students need more access than ever to quality programs and services so they can succeed in the future and help California thrive, we cannot pull the rug out from under them.

“A grave political climate currently exists in Sacramento: The super-majority vote needed to raise additional revenues to offset some of these deep cuts is extremely difficult to achieve. However, as the voice on behalf of nearly 1 million volunteer members and on behalf of more than 6 million children in the state, we cannot support any budget plan that drastically shortchanges children, just because it may be the ‘best that can be hoped for politically.’

California must stand for big visions and big dreams. We urge legislators and the Governor to put children first in their deliberations.

The California State PTA has nearly 1 million members throughout the state working on behalf of public schools, children and families, with the motto, “Every child, one voice.” The PTA is the nation’s oldest, largest and highest profile volunteer organization working to improve the education, health and welfare of all children and youth. The PTA also advocates at national, state and local levels for education and family issues. The PTA is nonprofit, nonsectarian and noncommercial.

For more information about the California State PTA, visit www.capta.org.

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Education Coalition Press Release on the State Budget Proposals

Governor Addresses Legislature to Propose Cutting Schools by Billions More, but Hundreds of Parents, Teachers, School Bus Drivers and Others Made Their Voices Heard at Budget Committee Hearing
Advocates Say Cuts Will Change the Face of Public Education in California, Undermine Our State’s Future
June 2, 2009

Governor Schwarzenegger addressed the California State Legislature today in an attempt to garner support for his plan to make further devastating cuts to our public schools, but education advocates yesterday spelled out the disastrous consequences of those cuts to our students. Hundreds of concerned parents, teachers, bus drivers, custodians, administrators, school board members and other concerned citizens lined up to give testimony for hours at the legislative committee hearing on the budget.

Douglas Bell, a San Mateo student, who graduated only three days ago, asked the Governor not to take away the resources students need to succeed. “Students are the future of California – please don’t undermine our education,” he said.

Representatives from the PTA also expressed their concerns. Laura Kieffer, a council president of the PTA from South Pasadena PTA schools have lost class size reduction programs, librarians, art and music classes, summer school classes and many other programs that help student achievement.

“The cut-backs in transportation mean that students in rural areas can’t get to school,” said Rebecca Scheel, a school bus driver from Gilroy. Richard Romero, a custodian from Fresno, said he’s worried about student health as cleaning crew cutbacks leave more germs and bugs circulating in classrooms for longer periods of time. Norma Pyle, a school employee from Sacramento, also expressed concern that adult supervision on school campuses is at an all-time low, including cutbacks in the campus safety monitors who prevent intruders from gaining access to school campuses.

Mike Bustos, a math teacher from Sacramento, said that with increasing class sizes, it is increasingly difficult to help students struggling to learn basic skills. “We simply can’t keep depleting resources from our students and expect them to learn. It’s time to make an investment in our future.”

“The entire music program in my school has been terminated,” said Art McGaw, a music teacher from Millbrae. “That means 400 music students no longer have the option of music education. These are the very classes that promote creative and abstract thinking – how can our leaders be so shortsighted?”

Representatives from community colleges also talked about the fact that the increasing cost of higher education is placing a college degree out of reach for many students. School board members and administrators spoke about the terrible decisions they must face as school budgets are obliterated by the lack of state funding.

Governor Schwarzenegger’s May Revision proposal includes more than $6 billion in additional cuts. These devastating cuts come on top of the $11.6 billion in cuts already enacted. That means that California’s students, who already live in a state that ranks 47th in the nation in per-pupil spending, will be subjected to cuts totaling $3,000 per student, wiping out programs that help student achievement and robbing an entire generation of the quality education they deserve. (Not to mention moving California toward the dubious ranking of dead- last in the nation in per-pupil funding.)

The Education Coalition remains committed to finding long-term solutions to the chronic underfunding of our public schools, and to addressing the needs of all students. Increased revenues must be part of the solution, including majority-vote fee increases and local revenue raising authority. In addition to looking at program reductions, the Legislature needs to review and reduce tax expenditures including the new tax breaks that were approved just this past year.

We strive to create a public school system where students can thrive in small class sizes with up-to-date textbooks and state-of-the-art technology, in schools with updated facilities. We want them to work with educators who have access to ongoing training and mentoring to ensure that they are able to do the best job possible of motivating our students to learn. We hope to create a prevailing and contagious outlook that all students deserve a chance to succeed, with the financial resources to make it happen.

The Education Coalition represents more than 2.5 million teachers, parents, administrators, school board members, school employees and other education advocates in California. For more information, please visit our website at: www.protectourstudents.org.

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California State PTA Urges Legislature to Reject a Cuts-Only Budget Solution

SACRAMENTO – The following letter from California State PTA President Pam Brady was presented to the June 1 meeting of the California legislature’s Conference Committee on the Budget and delivered to all of the state’s legislators.

Feel free to use statements from the letter to write to your legislative leaders.

The conference committee session, dedicated to the Governor’s May Revision proposals for education and child care, drew dozens of people to speak, including PTA leaders and students from throughout the state.

We especially want to thank PTA representatives from Chowchilla and Bass Lake (Eleventh District), San Mateo (Seventeenth District PTA), Plumas Lakes and Placer County (Third District), South Pasadena (First District), Pittsburg (Thirty-Second District) and Paso Robles (Twenty-Fourth District).

TV coverage of the hearing featured California State PTA volunteer members. To watch, click here.
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Legislative Alert: Budget Hearing June 1

Budget Hearing June 1
Please come to speak up for children if you can

On Monday, June 1, the Legislative Conference Committee on the Budget will hold a hearing on the latest proposed state budget cuts to education. Based on past experience, this may be the only public hearing on the budget.

It is vital that we communicate how united we are in opposition to these cuts.

We are asking any PTA members who can to come to Sacramento on Monday to attend the hearing. Bring your families and bring your children as well, if you’d like. This is your opportunity to share your story, or just to support other parents who will testify. Please forward this email to anyone who cares about children.

We will hand out California State PTA buttons outside the hearing room to help you show your support.

Here are the details for the hearing:

What:Legislative Conference Committee on the Budget
When: 10:30 a.m. Monday, June 1. The K-12 education portion is slated to begin at 11:30 a.m. Plan to arrive early to get into the room.
Where: State Capitol, Room 4203, in Sacramento.

Map powered by MapPress

Please come, if you can!
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State PTA Press Release on Special Election Results

California State PTA: Now is not the time to retreat from addressing the needs of all children
May 20, 2009

SACRAMENTO – California State PTA President Pam Brady called on state leaders to redouble their efforts to steer California through its current economic crisis, following the defeat yesterday of five measures on the May 19 special election ballot.

“The defeat of these measures doesn’t change our need to find budget and funding solutions for California; it only adds new urgency to our task,” said Brady, on behalf of California State PTA’s nearly 1 million volunteer members.

“Now is not the time to retreat,” Brady said. “Our state faces an unprecedented fiscal crisis and bold, bipartisan decisions are needed. Now – more than ever – we need to ensure that children are the top priority. We can’t keep making cuts to schools – including more than $1 billion proposed in additional cuts during the last month of this current school year alone. Today’s students are tomorrow’s workforce, and our state’s economic health in the future depends on what happens in classrooms now.”

Brady said the state must adopt long-term budget reforms, including reducing the voting margin in the Legislature to 55 percent or a simple majority for passage of both the California state budget and revenue measures. California is one of only three states that requires a two-thirds vote.

“We also must dispel this notion once and for all that cutting vital programs is the only way to close the state’s deficit. Polls consistently show the public does not want cuts to schools. We need a thoughtful, balanced approach both for the short and long-term.”

Brady said PTAs will continue to play an essential role in helping local communities and schools navigate through these challenging economic times.

“PTAs help bring people together to make a positive difference for all children and families,” Brady said. “In these times, we’ll need to seize on new and creative ways to work together. And parents need to stay well-informed and active so they can assist local and state policymakers in identifying and advocating for steps that will lead toward adequate funding for education.

“An entire generation of California children is threatened unless we change way decisions are being made in Sacramento right now.”

The California State PTA has nearly 1 million members throughout the state working on behalf of public schools, children and families, with the motto, “Every child, one voice.” The PTA is the nation’s oldest, largest and highest profile volunteer organization working to improve the education, health and welfare of all children and youth. The PTA also advocates at national, state and local levels for education and family issues. The PTA is nonprofit, nonsectarian and noncommercial.

For more information about the California State PTA, visit www.capta.org.

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