
The New York Daily News published an opinion article
by Michael Rebell today on cuts to education funding.
Below is the text version of the article. Click here
for a link to the New York Daily News site.
New York Daily News
Published: December 19, 2008
Slashing the city schools budget
is illegal, unfair
and unwise
By Michael Rebell
On Tuesday Gov. Paterson proposed $2.5 billion in
spending cuts to next year's state education budget.
Of that number, $1.8 billion represents a deferral of
increases committed to the state's children by the Legislature
as a result of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity lawsuit
that concluded in 2006 - a lawsuit I helped lead. The
remaining $700 million represents an actual 3.3% reduction
from this year's education spending level.
Times are hard, and New York cannot avoid reckoning
with its budget crisis. But the plain facts are that
reducing appropriations to New York City's schools below
the actual amount spent this year would be unconstitutional.
And while much of the scheduled increase could legally
be delayed, doing so would be as unwise as failing to
address the financial crises on Wall Street or in Detroit.
In 2003, New York's highest court ruled that the state's
education funding formula denied city public school
children the "sound, basic education" guaranteed
them by the state's Constitution. The Court gave the
state a period of time to determine "the actual
cost" of such an education and to revise the formula
to provide that amount to every school in the city.
The state stalled past the court deadline, and it took
another court order to get the process going. Now that
a plan for constitutional compliance is underway and
the money is actually flowing, the state cannot legally
roll back its progress by reducing the level of resources
it has begun providing.
Slowing the rate of new increases does not raise the
same constitutional issues, but it does mean that, during
their formative years, millions of children would be
denied the resources they need to become capable citizens
and workers. It also means that what once appeared to
be the state's commitment to eliminating achievement
gaps will, in hindsight, have become just a fleeting
aspiration.
Obviously, the governor - a good man who has fought
hard in the past on behalf of education and children
- must find ways to overcome an enormous state budget
deficit. But there are better solutions than shackling
our children's future. One possibility would be to impose
an extra tax on the wealthy in order to maintain adequate
education funding levels. If Paterson wants to avoid
such a tax increase, he should instead urge the governors
of the other 15 states who are currently cutting school
funding to join him in petitioning the President-elect
to throw a rope to the states to help them maintain
their commitment to educational excellence and equity.
Perhaps as part of the new administration's anticipated
stimulus package, we should invest in the human capital
we need to maintain the country's prosperity. Safeguards
could be put in place to ensure that the money goes
immediately and directly to maintain educational services
without sloshing around in states' general funds.
I estimate that such a program would cost about $20
billion nationwide for the next year. That is a lot
of money, to be sure, but it pales in comparison to
the bailout given to Wall Street, and it would arguably
be money much better spent. If we can rescue banks and
car manufacturers, surely we can afford to do the same
for our children.
Rebell is executive director of the Campaign for
Educational Equity, based at Teachers College, Columbia
University, and was co-counsel for the plaintiffs in
the CFE litigation.
For
further resources, visit www.schoolfunding.info.
National Access Network, Teachers College, Columbia
University.
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