Governor Tom Corbett (on left) provided Exhibit A for why the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania needs
to pass a full and fair funding formula for public education in Pennsylvania.
Earlier this week, state legislators from Philadelphia, plus the mayor, the
superintendent and members of the School Reform Commission (SRC) petitioned the
legislature to give the city the right to assess a cigarette tax, the revenues
of which would provide needed finances for the schools. The governor responded
by offering them a deal: vote for a revision in pensions for state workers
(something even members of his own Republican party did not support) in
exchange for the cigarette tax. by trying to play hard ball politics the governor
showed his true hand by pitting pensioners and union members against school children, so he would not have to
assess higher taxes on his corporate cronies in the shale gas industry.
Groups such POWER and PCCY have been urging the passage of
full, fair funding formula. In its study of how public education funding is
decided across the country, the Education Law Center
In those states that do have a formula for education funding,
several factors are considered, such as
poverty rates, special needs children, the number of ESL students, the number
of students in foster care, the number of children with disabilities and the
like. Because there is a legally binding
formula, decisions are made on the basis of need, not cronyism. However, not
only must there be a formula, there must be adequate funding. The state is
woefully short in this area too. The governor and the legislature will boast
that they have increased education funding, but if one is only paying half the
bill, that may keep the bill collectors at bay for a while, but sooner or later
the bill becomes due.
The bill for adequate and fair funding for public education
is way overdue. The Philadelphia school system is about to collapse with overcrowded
understaffed schools with too few auxiliary staff to keep the schools healthy
and safe for students and teachers. The cigarette tax will only help
Philadelphia reach last year’s level of funding, which itself was woefully
inadequate. By trying to play hardball with school funding the governor shows just how closed minded and callous he is. By proposing a budget that does not
begin to meet the needs of school districts across the state, the legislature
shows just how blind and callous they are to the real needs of the people.
When injustice and callousness becomes so ingrained that people have no conscience about what they are doing, they display what Hannah Arendt called the “banality of evil.” Many a preacher on stewardship Sunday has reminded parishioners
that one’s budget and checkbook offer a statement as to the state of one’s soul
and the quality of one’s morality. By that standard the governor and the
legislature have gone just about as low on the scale as they can go. It is time
for Pennsylvania to enact a fully funded formula for public education and give
the children of the Commonwealth the quality of education they are guaranteed by
the state constitution. The issue is not simply about politics or money; it is about how we will regard and respond to the needs of the most vulnerable in our midst, in this case school children. In that sense a full, fair funding formula is a deeply moral and spiritual issue for political leaders and the communities they are called to serve.
[This blog entry has been sent to Governor Corbett, as well as Sen. Ted Erickson and Rep. William Adolph, my representatives. Rep. Adolph is also head of the House Appropriations Committee which determines the budget. This blog has also been submitted to the Philadelphia Inquirer for consideration on the editorial page]
1 comment:
Great insight and clarity.
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