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Education

Villareal: Education & Budget Challenges Await Perry in Texas


by: Katherine Haenschen

Thu Jan 19, 2012 at 10:42 AM CST

First in our in-box with a post-Perry campaign statement is Rep. Mike Villareal. The San Antonio legislator is a champion of public education here in Texas.  

Statement from State Representative Mike Villareal:

"I welcome the Governor back to Texas. I would be happy to fill him in on all the things that he missed while he was gone, from the harm done by his education cuts to the state's struggles for clean air and water. While he was campaigning, students in thousands of elementary schools have been crowded into classrooms that exceed the state's standard class size limit due to education cuts he championed. The state is facing multiple lawsuits because of a school finance system that fails to meet constitutional muster and treats kids unfairly just because of the school district they live in. We are headed towards a second summer of water shortages while the state's water plan is unfunded. We hit #1 among all states for most greenhouse gas emissions. The state has not taken any steps to fill the hole in the revenue system that pays for schools, roads, water, and other essentials. I believe Texas should be leading the way on education and clean air and water, not lagging behind. I'm sure the Governor is ready to get back to work to prevent the state from remaining in worse shape than he found it when he first entered the Governor's Office."

Welcome home, Rick!  

Discuss :: (1 Comments)

It's Time to Build a Medical School in Austin


by: Kirk Watson

Tue Sep 20, 2011 at 02:21 PM CDT

(Tremendous initiative by State Senator Kirk Watson.   - promoted by Katherine Haenschen)

Earlier today, I delivered a speech declaring that it’s time for a medical school, teaching hospital and research institute in Austin.  I also outlined the process I’m proposing to finally get it done after all these years, as well as the group I’ve put together to lead the effort.
 
Below, you'll see the text of the first part of the speech, along with links to other sections of it (for a full version, go here).
 
This is going to be a long effort involving a whole lot of people.  But the economic and quality-of-life payoff, for Austin and all of Central Texas, would be enormous.  I hope you’ll keep an eye on it, help with it, and join this community effort to make this long-sought vision a reality.
 
=====

It’s time for a Medical School in Austin.

There's More... :: (4 Comments, 1181 words in story)

The Right to Declare Handicap Higher Education


by: Arctotraveler

Sat Sep 17, 2011 at 06:23 PM CDT

Dear White House Administration and those with disabilities in Higher Education - What positive changes have taken place sense fall 2008?

I have never returned to any campus for fear of retaliation. Is it safe to return and can I bring my guns back to my farm so the police cannot make an excuse for "due cause?"

Unlike our Governor  Rick Perry who has 24/7 armed security protection paid for by the state, we really do have a Coyote infestation and an occasional rabid animal.  A three foot copper head just bit my dog on the nose yesterday before I step on it! Once in a while we have a Private Security Firm creeping around in the dark like lone wolves of terrorism!

Speak Up or Forever Hold Your Peace!
Letters to the White House Administration [edited] by G N O'Dell 04/15/2010

Higher Education ADA regulations have become so overwhelming burdensome that they no longer aid the disabled student with equal access to colleges and universities, which is the original ADA Act legislative intent enforced by the Office of Civil Rights.

If you have had the misfortune of participation in the process, you will have experience retaliation not only from the school that you filed against but the Office of Civil Rights.

If you have the misfortune of living in a succession philosophy state such as Texas, and file a grievance, you will be targeted by Private Security firms funded by the 911 Patriot act for terrorism, and will be investigated as if you are an enemy of the State. The Office of Civil Rights as well, will use of the 911 Patriot Act against you and is an unnecessary expense- a wasteful burden on tax payer. Do I need to mention the consequences of the poor student who is attacked by this type of retaliation for filing an ADA grievance?  

"If I ever lose my mouth, all my teeth north and south, I won't have to talk no more!" (Cat Stevens)"  

The way it once worked, and it did work much more efficiently, was the right for a student to declare a Handicap to his classroom professor before, or the first few days of class, then the professor could make an assessment concerning the disability and try to find a way the student could complete all the tasks and be honored with the same credit value after completion of the course just like any other student.

Example: A student with an amputated foot should have the right to approach the professor of Physical Education Class and declare his/her handicap and the professor can make an informal assessment by understanding the students impairment and modify the curriculum in a way that would demand more or equal participation that would satisfy the course just as any student with both feet.

After successful completion of the course by the disabled student, credit for the course would hold the same value as any other student.

The way it works now [Fall 2008], the student must register with the department of disabilities, and once that is done, given a visa as if to walk the campus or attend a class, the disabled student is treated as if a foreign national that must show his visa on demand. Prior to 2008, and it may still be a practice, all disabled students registered with the department of disability were considered having a mental illness, even if the disability was/is an amputated foot.

Students should have an opportunity to opt out of college disability registration and declare a handicap with the professor of a particular class without any formalities or repercussions and ensures that the disabled student's diploma at the end of the 4-8 year process has the same value as any other student.

Certainly, there are many cases were the student is dependent on the services of the campus disability office and should use those services and be free to file an ADA grievance, just as a student that has disclosed an informal handicap request to his professor without the fear of retaliation!

The biggest problem that we have seen is there are some students that are severely mentally impaired and could be a danger on campus. There is only one way to solve this problem and that is that every student (each and every one) are required to submit a mental health certification at the time of registration. If birds that do not have wings cannot fly, then it is just a fact of life that those that suffer from mental illness that could be a danger to others should not be registered on a college campus in the first place.

Lastly, a student should be able to by-pass disability campus registration with the disability office by declaring themselves with a handicap and make minor reasonable request such as a chair or those things that are not an overwhelmingly burdensome on the school.

Any person that believes the disabled are protected by the ADA act as if they are no longer mistreated, abused, raped, killed, retaliated, discriminated against, and protected by law are complete fools and I believe the money invested in the DOJ Office of Civil Rights Disability office is a complete waste of funding because it is totally ineffective [As of Fall 2008].  

Why do I believe that the DOJ Office of Civil Rights is ineffective [April 2010]? The principles and ideologies where set into place to win the election of George Bush Senior without the consultation of those that are disabled and the appointments to that office and workers should be those suffering by a disabling condition who are by-far the experts in the knowledge of what the DOJ should base their founding principles and ideologies.

Further, the hiring of disabled experts in management positions of the DOJ can rewrite and rebuild a better cost effective program that works and the attorneys assigned to enforce the law would actually represent (work for) the disabled and would be chastised or terminated for trading personal political favors to play down important cases that would make the ADA work like it should.

This same approach can be applied to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid; however, I never see anyone with a disability working in these offices; especially in a management or chief directive office of these departments.[In Texas we have one exception but he is an elected official, Greg Abbot Texas Attorney General]

If you cannot get a job in the government organization that writes the laws of affirmative action, how can you expect the private sector to hire the disabled if our government officials do not take the lead and hire these highly qualified experts in the area of the disability concerns, that far exceeds the criteria that is used to hire or appoint to these offices.

Original unedited blog posting by G. N. O'Dell:

http://www.scribd.com/fullscre...

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Texas State Teachers Association: Rick Perry is "All Hair and No Cattle"


by: Katherine Haenschen

Thu Sep 01, 2011 at 00:57 PM CDT

"Rick Perry is no friend of public education, and that is direct threat to our economy and a generation of young Texans." -- Rita Haecker, TSTA President

On the day that Rick Perry's 2011 budget takes effect, the Texas State Teachers Association released a searing statement on Rick Perry's abandonment of Texas schools, teachers, and students.

The highlights in their run-down of Rick Perry's war on students and teachers include:

  • Perry's budget cuts $4 billion from school district formula funding.
  • This budget cuts $1.4 billion in education grants, including Pre-K and dropout prevention.
  • 49,000 school employees may lose their jobs within a year.
  • 43,000 returning college students will lose financial aid.
  • Texas teacher pay ranks 31st nationally.
  • Per-student funding in Texas ranks in the bottom third of all states.

TSTA also reminds us that Perry refused to spend $6.5 billion in the Rainy Day fund to fund public education.

Education is crucial to the future of Texas. Our economy depends on sufficiently educated, innovative workers to keep pace with the global economy.

It is shameful that Rick Perry seeks short-term political gain by slashing the education budget, at the expense of the short- and long-term good of the people of Texas.

The full release is below the jump.  

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 385 words in story)

Rick Perry on the Issues: K-12 Education


by: Ben Sherman

Mon Aug 29, 2011 at 01:44 AM CDT

(Ben is one of our new BOR writers. He'll be helping cover Perry's campaign, and provide issue primers like this.   - promoted by Katherine Haenschen)

About one in ten American schoolchildren are Texan schoolchildren. Clearly, Texas must maintain an effective public education system for its own and the United States' sake. Rick Perry doesn't care.

Since 2000, enrollment in Texas public schools has increased by 874,000 to 4.9 million schoolchildren.

As Texas' schools were rapidly filling up five years ago, Perry mandated a gratuitous 33% cut in local school tax rates. Now, a shocking one in three Texas high school graduates in college require corrective work to learn math, writing and reading skills that their high schools couldn't afford to teach them.

But that was just the groundwork for Perry. When his own fiscal mismanagement led to a $27 billion budget shortfall this year, Perry used the opportunity to slash public education even more.

During the Legislative session, Perry pushed for and received a $4 billion cut from the public education budget, prompting tens of thousands of teacher layoffs across the state. This kind of buffoonery can only lead one place. "Heading into the new fiscal year, Texas ranked 42nd in per-pupil spending among U.S. states and 43rd in high-school graduation rates," Bloomberg News explains.

Is this terrible reality a product of Rick Perry's stupidity? Maybe not.

Perry recently suggested that our government's founding fathers' dedication to the "general welfare" doesn't mean that government programs have a right to promote the general welfare. Under Perry's insane view, public education is treated as unimportant.

Why else would Rick Perry purposefully fail to prepare Texas schoolchildren for their futures? Maybe because studies show that the poorer and less educated Americans are, the more likely they are to vote for Republicans.

Don't put it past him. Rick Perry only cares about one Texas child: himself.

Rick Perry Fails Our Kids

  • Rick Perry has robbed Texas kids of a quality education by slashing billions in public education funding.
  • Rick Perry's education policy has forced tens of thousands of teacher layoffs, bigger classes and less funding per student.
  • Despite being home to about a tenth of American schoolchildren, Texas ranks 43rd among the states in high school graduation rates.
  • One third of Texas high school students who go to college require corrective work to make up for what they didn't learn in high school.
Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Obama's Education Policy an Attack on Families


by: Pattinson

Wed Apr 20, 2011 at 10:26 PM CDT

As a high school student in Green Bay, Wisconsin, I had an incredible amount of potential but was completely uninterested in academics, leaving me with few options upon graduating. Top private colleges were out of the question, and I didn't want to attend another public institution. I saw a flyer for Herzing University, which prompted me to look into the school. I liked what the school had to offer, and after a trip to the campus in Madison, I decided to enroll.

Shortly after I began classes, I found out I was going to be a father. I faced the difficult decision of whether I could both stay in school or leave to help provide for my newborn child. In the end, I didn't have to choose, Herzing helped me to find a job at a local factory after my classes, and helped me schedule for work and school. When my son's mother's substance abuse problems left me as a single father, I had to take on another part-time job to make ends meet. Even then, Herzing helped me design a course program that allowed me to work both jobs, attend school and spend time with my infant son. The administration frequently checked in with me to see how I was doing, and my instructors helped me in any way they could.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 393 words in story)

Come and Take It!


by: Mack Simpson

Wed Mar 02, 2011 at 08:47 PM CST

 

The perfect image to share with your friends this Texas Independence Day!

 

Come and Take It!

 

Also available as a PDF here: http://precinct1706.org/dem_docs/comeandtakeit.pdf 

And as a hi-res 300dpi PNG here: http://precinct1706.org/dem_docs/comeandtakeit.png  

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Latino density & per capita budget cuts


by: Julio Gonzalez Altamirano

Wed Mar 02, 2011 at 03:02 PM CST

The current legislative session has been described as possibly the "worst in recent memory" for Latino Texans. What are likely coalitions that might be able to mitigate the budget cut proposals under consideration?

To figure this out, I visualized Texas county data matching Latino population density and per capita budget cuts.  Demographic data on total population and Hispanic density is based on 2010 Census data made available at the Texas Tribune data portal.  Projected budgets cuts are based on Center for Public Policy Priorities (CPPP) estimates; the $10 billion cut scenario was utilized for the Medicaid visualization.  My complete source file can be found here.

Let's start with public education.  The blue line represents the state average per capita K12 cut: $127. The 2010 Census data indicated that Texas is 38% Hispanic, so counties above that are above average in terms of Latino density.  Finally, the larger the size of the bubble, the larger the plotted county's total population.  Examining the chart yields that a likely best strategy for pro-education advocates is to build a coalition of Harris and Dallas-area county legislators along with targeted low population counties with high per capita cuts that are represented by conservative legislators.

On the Medicaid front, there is a stronger correlation between Latino density and size of per capita cuts.  The average state cut is $406 under the $10 billion cut scenario. This is represented by the red line.  Two Rio Grande Valley counties - Hidalgo and Cameron - are particularly hard hit under any of the CPPP scenarios.  Legislators from the RGV might be able to form a pro-Medicaid coalition with the eclectic mix of small- to mid-size counties that also will be experiencing very high per capita cuts.

Overall, the current budget promises to wreak havoc on all of Texas, as well as disproportionately burden many Latino communities across the state.  It is the culmination of years of reckless, ideologically-driven budgeting. Hopefully, the extreme nature of proposed cuts will create a space for new, surprising coalitions to propose a more balanced approached to repairing the budget mess. Such an approach would include use of the Rainy Day Fund and practical, fair revenue increases.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Use the Darn Rainy Day Fund!


by: Deja Vu

Wed Feb 16, 2011 at 10:11 PM CST

People in Wisconsin are fighting!

http://www.greenbaypressgazett... in Wisconsin are fighting!

We have that same fighting spirit!

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 91 words in story)

Undermining Texas' Economic Future to Cut Education Spending Now


by: liberaltexan

Thu Feb 10, 2011 at 09:24 PM CST

Texas Republicans promised to address the $27 billion budget shortfall through budget cuts only, and without the use of the so-called Rainy Day Fund or without raising new revenue. Republican lawmakers have talking about spreading the pain and sharing the burden, but the truth is that the burden of the budget cuts (which were created by the way due to the policies of Texas Republicans over the last decade) is not being shared equally among all Texans. In fact Republicans are placing a significant burden on future Texans. Through deep cuts in education Republicans are placing the burden of their failed economic policies on the backs of future generations.

The Texas Independent reports that the House budget proposal would reduced public education funding by $3.1 billion (9.1%). This would also include a budget cut to the Foundation School Program which would be $9.8 billion below scheduled formula requirements after accounting for student population growth, and cutting other programs by two-thirds, including teacher incentive pay and pre-K grants, in addition to increasing the maximum student-teacher ratio in elementary schools. The Senate budget proposal would provide more funding for public education; $500 million more to the Permanent School Fund (leaving a shortfall of $9.3 billion), plus $400 million to help salvage funding for programs in areas including pre-K, high school completion and college readiness.

More Below the Fold...

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 453 words in story)

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