governments

A teacher schools the Dispatch

When we read this article in the Dispatch by senior editor Joe Hallet, we were taken aback a little by how fawning it was, and how it seemd to suffer from quite a lot of selective amnesia. One Worthington school teacher thought so too, and forwarded to us his email to Mr. Hallet.

Joe

I read your column on Sunday and came across this line:

(Kasich) used Senate Bill 5 to take on public-employee unions, whose pay and benefit packages were growing unsustainable for taxpayers, in part because their local government and school officials had forgotten how to say no.

I don't think this is a fair characterization at all. The front page article ("Public, private compensation in the same ballpark.") in the Dispatch on Sunday demonstrated that public employee salaries and benefits are on par with those in the private sector. By your logic, combined with the article on pg 1 Sunday, you could say that private sector salaries have also grown unsustainable since private employees have a slightly richer salary and benefit package than public employees.

No discussion of the impact of public employee salaries on budgets is complete without pointing out that, since 2005, the income tax was cut 21%, the estate tax was eliminated, and the locally collected tangible personal property (TPP) tax was replaced with the state collected commercial activities tax (CAT). The income tax cut resulted in a sustained decrease at the state level in tax revenue which was evident even prior to the recession even with the addition of new CAT revenues. In 2005 total state revenue was $56.5 billion - by 2011 that had fallen to an estimated $50.5 billion which is $43.5 billion in 2005 dollars!

On the local level, governments and school districts were literally robbed of tax revenue by the state legislature's elimination of the TPP and estate tax. All of this has dealt a crushing blow to the ability of local governments and school districts to sustain services by starving them of local revenue as well as state aid.

These tax changes were heralded in 2005 as essential to economic growth in Ohio with the promise that the reforms would result in job growth in our state. I think the record on this score shows that tax reform in Ohio has not achieved the promised results and has instead put incredible stress on the state and local governments' ability to provide vital and expected services.

It is disingenuous to say that public salaries and benefits are unsustainable while ignoring the impact tax reform has had on Ohio's ability to fund its government. Furthermore, the front page of the Dispatch on the same day as your column refutes the notion that public salaries and benefits are out of line or unsustainable.

Mark Hill, Worthington school teacher
Columbus OH

We previousy wrote about this issue in an article titled "GUTTING EDUCATION FOR A CUP OF CHEAP COFFEE"

Is election tampering of SB5 coming to Ohio

Yesterday we read an article detailing some very troubling activity by Americans for Prosperity, the Koch brothers funded astroturf organization

Americans for Prosperity is sending absentee ballots to Democrats in at least two Wisconsin state Senate recall districts with instructions to return the paperwork after the election date.

The fliers, obtained by POLITICO, ask solidly Democratic voters to return ballots for the Aug. 9 election to the city clerk "before Aug. 11."

Those Wisconsin recall elections are central to the fight against SB5 like measures implemented by Republican Governor Scott Walker. Meanwhile, back in Ohio the Cincinnatti inquirer has a report

Americans for Prosperity-Ohio kicks off a statewide series of Taxpayer Town Halls on August 16th in the Greater Cincinnati Area. AFP-Ohio is partnering with Tea Parties, 9-12 Groups, and other liberty organizations to host these town halls, which will focus on the financial crises many local governments across Ohio are facing, how those crises could affect citizens, jobs and our economy, what local governments can do to address their financial challenges, and how Senate Bill 5 can help.

If anyone attempts to tamper with Ohio elections they should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

K-12 Budget Info

K-12 FUNDING PROPOSALS:

  • Repeals Evidence-Based Model for school funding.
  • Decrease overall education funding by $1.3 billion (11.5%) in FY 12 ($10.2 billion).
  • Decrease overall education funding by another $500 million (4.9%) in FY13 ($9.7 billion).
  • Decrease overall education funding by $3.1 billion over F Y12-13 from F Y 11 amounts ($1.3 billion cut in F Y 12 and $1.8 billion cut in F Y 13).
  • Increase Foundation funding by 2% for FY 12 and 1.5% for FY 13.
  • Eliminate state fiscal stabilization funds (federal stimulus for state foundation) of $457 million in FY 12.
  • Reduce federal stimulus for IDEA Part B and Title IA totaling $400 million in FY11 by 90% for FY 12 with the remainder eliminated in FY13.
  • Decrease overall Special Education funding by 14.5% in FY 12 and another 2.1% in FY 13. million (34.2%) in FY 13.
  • Precise data for charter school funding not yet available because charter school funds flow through local districts.
  • Maintain overall funding for Joint Vocational School Districts in FY 12 and FY 13.
  • Decrease overall funding for early childhood education by 4.7% in FY 12 and another .5% in FY 13. and local governments by July 1, 2012. Administrative Services that local governments and school districts can join if they choose.
  • Reduce Educator Standards Board funding from FY 11 by 40.8% to $786,737 in both FY 12 and FY 13.
  • Require employer and employee to each pay 12% of pension contributions (50/50 split). Currently, the employer pays 14% and the employee pays 10%.

K-12POLICY PROPOSALS:

  • Provide additional teacher payments for students who exceed achievement growth.
  • Use "teacher quality" to drive employment decisions instead of seniority.
  • Test teachers in failing schools.
  • Streamline dismissal process for poor-performing schools.
  • Give parents the right to "reconstitute" schools.
  • Close poorest performing schools.
  • Increase the number of EdChoice vouchers available (from 14,000 to 28,000).
  • Remove cap on charter schools and enhance access to facilities.
  • Expand on-line education.
  • Make Ohio the PReferred destination" for Teach for America students