
Covid $ Diverted...Follow the money and #FundFamilies (not failure)
COVID ED FUNDS DIVERTED. This week, Biden press secretary Jen Psaki admitted that the Blob’s intention for stimulus funds is for staff, not kids, for hiring and salaries and not on ensuring schools are opened!
FROM CALIFORNIA comes news that dollars intended to help low income, English learners and foster youth could be spent on… wait for it… pay raises for teachers. Democrat legislator Shirley Weber, a former college professor and San Diego school board member points out that “this is not what we (the legislature) intended.” State Superintendent Tom Torlakson was heavily financed by the teachers unions and apparently doesn’t care what the legislature intended. He is going full speed ahead on his plan to take the dollars away from kids and give it to the unions.
FOLLOW THE MONEY. As CATO’s Neal McClusky reports, despite two enormous COVID relief packages to schools already passed, combined with another larger $212 billion in funding appropriated for education to educate — almost one-third of what we spent on education nationally in the last regular year — classrooms remain closed across the country (except in private and some charter schools) while billions sit unused nearly a year after being dispensed.
RANDI STUTTERS THROUGH THE NUMBERS. Check out this summer’s Facebook interview with the AFT president, who gets tongue tied when asked about how she arrived at her prediction that 1.4 million education jobs could be lost without the above referenced stimulus bill. “How did you get to your number?” Weingarten is asked, as she ahs and ums while she tries to cobble together an insufficient and misleading explanation:
Why, indeed? The moral of the story is that if schools won’t reopen, we can give families the funds. They will get the education their kids need and deserve.
#FundFamilies (not failure)
“A big part of the challenge here for a number of schools is that they need… to obligate funds according to spending plans, rather than exhausting all balances as soon as they’re received. So the challenge here is, how do they plan ahead? They can hire, if they need to hire additional teachers now for smaller class sizes or if they need to hire bus drivers or if they need to hire, they need to do improvements to their facilities, they want to be able to know, understandably, just like any business or company, that they will be able to employ teachers next year and the year ahead, so that’s why this funding is so essential is because they need to be able to plan ahead so that they can make the improvements now and do the hiring now.”As reported by The Federalist, “Psaki’s comments come after nearly $1 trillion of Congress’ previous coronavirus spending funds are still sitting unused. One $100 million authorization in the CARES Act, which granted federally funded schools resources ‘for cleaning and disinfecting’ as well as ‘assistance in counseling and distance learning,’ was also left untouched as schools around the United States kept their doors closed in exchange for virtual learning.
FROM CALIFORNIA comes news that dollars intended to help low income, English learners and foster youth could be spent on… wait for it… pay raises for teachers. Democrat legislator Shirley Weber, a former college professor and San Diego school board member points out that “this is not what we (the legislature) intended.” State Superintendent Tom Torlakson was heavily financed by the teachers unions and apparently doesn’t care what the legislature intended. He is going full speed ahead on his plan to take the dollars away from kids and give it to the unions.
FOLLOW THE MONEY. As CATO’s Neal McClusky reports, despite two enormous COVID relief packages to schools already passed, combined with another larger $212 billion in funding appropriated for education to educate — almost one-third of what we spent on education nationally in the last regular year — classrooms remain closed across the country (except in private and some charter schools) while billions sit unused nearly a year after being dispensed.
RANDI STUTTERS THROUGH THE NUMBERS. Check out this summer’s Facebook interview with the AFT president, who gets tongue tied when asked about how she arrived at her prediction that 1.4 million education jobs could be lost without the above referenced stimulus bill. “How did you get to your number?” Weingarten is asked, as she ahs and ums while she tries to cobble together an insufficient and misleading explanation:
“So we uh both punted and then we actually, um, used some of the statistics we’ve already been seeing, um, from, um, some of the very well established budget experts, uh, in Washington, DC…If you just uh…count the jobs lost, uh, that come out every month… Because as people have been starting to go inside… you know remote… um, there have been support personnel…so you can do both remote and in person… there has been a need to get additional teachers…Without the stimulus that hiring is going to stop.” HUH?REQUIRE REOPENING TO RECEIVE FUNDS. The answer is right in front of us and the chorus for this logical next step is growing. As proposed by Louisiana Congressman and minority whip Steve Scalise, “Let’s be clear: The extra $100+ billion for schools Democrats want to pass isn’t even tied to reopening. They REJECTED @RepAshleyHinson’s bill to require schools getting money to at least have a plan to reopen. Why should we send more money to schools not even planning to open?”
Why, indeed? The moral of the story is that if schools won’t reopen, we can give families the funds. They will get the education their kids need and deserve.
#FundFamilies (not failure)
SPEAK OUT AND LET THE SUNSHINE IN. The only antidote to ignorance is sunshine. If you’re concerned, write, call, speak out, share and let the Sunshine In. Take it away, Aquarius!
Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education. We’re always delighted to hear from our readers…suggestions, questions and even the occasional complaint!
Latest On The School Reopening Saga
By Jeanne Allen, Founder and CEO of CER
But then a funny thing happened. The unions moved the goal post. Again. And again. And suddenly President Biden has gone from promising to open schools to committing to open schools one day a week in the first hundred days, to deferring to the CDC guidance on opening, only to find that the CDC guidance is no more ambitious than it was three months ago – and that the unions still refuse to follow that guidance.
On national television this week, CNN anchor John Berman tried to get to the heart of how the president now feels about the issue, asking Symone Sanders, chief advisor and chief spokesperson for the Vice President, who refused to answer the question.
Sanders: “It is the Administration’s position that teachers should be prioritized for vaccinations. …”
Berman: “Does the president feel that teachers have to be vaccinated for schools to open, yes or no?”
The Administration is bending to the unions, which despite colorful pictorial articles written about their willingness to find common ground, are refusing to negotiate.
Just yesterday, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers president Jerry T. Jordan, who has long complained about not enough resources or assurances of safety to open, announced that the schools still would not open. Claiming it is the decision of the district (as if they don’t control when teachers show up and not), Jordan wrote, “the Federation’s position that we are unable to verify the safety of buildings for reoccupancy… remains unchanged.”
Which begs the question as to why the politicians abide union behavior.
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says the unions are “something akin to a political party…” and that “LA and San Francisco had to sue to force the conversation about reopening.”
Millions of parents are struggling just to keep up with learning, knowing that:
Which begs the question as to why the politicians abide union behavior. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says the unions are “something akin to a political party…” and that “LA and San Francisco had to sue to force the conversation about reopening.”
Of the $68 billion allocated for school reopenings and safety through states, districts have drawn down only $4 billion of it, and the unions are demanding more, claiming they need more resources to open. It’s likely that this maneuvering is a big fat bargaining chip, and that when the nation’s kids are at their absolute worst, they will use this to secure a major federally subsidized pay raise that will magically result in them unlocking the gates.
It will be too late by then, and their miscalculations now and in the future will be met by not only fury, but a major rejection of their policies. Despite polls saying otherwise (and most who answer polls about education are unlikely to be parents on the front lines answering unknown callers or online surveys), unions will reap what they sow. And the children will suffer.
Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.