California government schools do not work. They are owned by unions, not the public. Bad teachers are kept and new, good teachers are let go.
School Boards have become the bag men for extortionist unions, using the force of government to collect bribes for the unions--who then elect the Board members with the bribe money.
Now, these schools will have less money to pass around.
"The LAO’s $25.4 billion projection assumes the current year’s budget, which the Legislature passed only last month, will end $6 billion in the red. That’s not all that surprising, given the wink-and-a-nod revenue assumptions and cost savings built into the budget. The additional $19 billion includes the end of $8 billion in temporary personal income, vehicle, and sales taxes next year that voters passed in February 2009. Their expiration then will lower the Prop 98 minimum obligation to K-12 and community colleges by $2.2 billion, from $49.7 billion to $47.5 billion next year – a 4.4 percent cut. Cutting that money doesn’t help solve the $25 billion deficit; it’s built into the budget forecast."
But we know the real deficit will be over $25 billion--after a year they thought the deficit was $19 billion, when on the final day of the fiscal year the deficit was $45 billion.
Less money should force the professional educators to again become educators and stop being champions of "social justice".
More...
School Boards have become the bag men for extortionist unions, using the force of government to collect bribes for the unions--who then elect the Board members with the bribe money.
Now, these schools will have less money to pass around.
"The LAO’s $25.4 billion projection assumes the current year’s budget, which the Legislature passed only last month, will end $6 billion in the red. That’s not all that surprising, given the wink-and-a-nod revenue assumptions and cost savings built into the budget. The additional $19 billion includes the end of $8 billion in temporary personal income, vehicle, and sales taxes next year that voters passed in February 2009. Their expiration then will lower the Prop 98 minimum obligation to K-12 and community colleges by $2.2 billion, from $49.7 billion to $47.5 billion next year – a 4.4 percent cut. Cutting that money doesn’t help solve the $25 billion deficit; it’s built into the budget forecast."
But we know the real deficit will be over $25 billion--after a year they thought the deficit was $19 billion, when on the final day of the fiscal year the deficit was $45 billion.
Less money should force the professional educators to again become educators and stop being champions of "social justice".
More...