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    Schools fear worst budget cuts ahead

    LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) — Teenage girls in ponytails and boys in long athletic shorts dash across the gym at Abraham Lincoln Middle School, pausing their game of indoor tennis to motion "Y-M-C-A" with their arms as the Village People's song blares from the loudspeaker.

    It's a scene happening less frequently these days. Budget cuts and teacher layoffs have forced the school to cut some PE classes, reduce library hours and eliminate small literacy classes for problem readers and Spanish for sixth- and seventh-graders.

    "I'm scared to death. As we continue to look at fewer and fewer non-classroom positions that are there, at some point it's going to impact core classroom positions and that's a very, very scary thing," said principal Josh Keene.

    Educators across America, like Keene, are bracing for a tough reality. Even in a best-case scenario that assumes strong economic growth next year, it won't be until 2013 or later when districts see budget levels return to pre-recession levels, said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators in Arlington, Va. That means more cuts and layoffs are likely ahead.

    "The worst part is that it's not over," Domenech said.

    Already, an estimated 294,000 jobs in the education sector have been lost since 2008, including those in higher education.

    The cuts are felt from Keller, Texas, where the district moved to a pay-for-ride transportation system rather than cut busing altogether, to Georgia, where 20 days were shaved off the calendar for pre-kindergarten classes. In California, a survey found that nearly half of all districts last year cut or reduced art, drama and music programs. Nationally, 120 districts primarily in rural areas have gone to a four-day school week to save on transportation and utility costs, according to the National Conference of State Legislators. Others are implementing fees to play sports, cutting field trips and ending after-school programs.

    Districts have little choice but to put off buying textbooks and technology and training teachers, said Rob Monson, a principal in Parkston, S.D., who is president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals.

    At Abraham Lincoln Middle School, Keene says he's worried — not just about offering electives next year, but whether class sizes in core subjects will jump from around 25 to 35 or 40. His district received $6 million less from the state this year, which meant six staff positions in his school were cut. Even if state funding remains the same next year, the district expects to have from $5 million to $7 million less because of increased pension obligations and other expenses.

    Recognizing the reality districts face, President Barack Obama included $30 billion in his $447 billion jobs creation package to save teachers' jobs. The Senate rejected the jobs package as well as a separate measure focused on saving the jobs of teachers and first responders. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has said the plan resembles "bailouts" that haven't proven to work and only perpetuate economic problems.

    Not everyone sees all doom and gloom in schools' budget woes. Some say many districts haven't wisely spent tax dollars or didn't adequately prepare for the end of the $100 billion in federal stimulus dollars for schools. And that while the number of students per teacher in America dropped from 22.3 in 1970 to 15.3 in 2008, according to the National Center For Education Statistics, they say the reduction hasn't made a noticeable difference.

    Karen Hawley Miles, executive director of Education Resource Strategies, a nonprofit based in Watertown, Mass., that helps urban districts develop ways to more effectively use resources, encourages districts to use this time to make changes they have been reluctant to do. They include strategically raising class sizes to refocus on teacher quality and changing teacher compensation to be more tied to performance, she said.

    "In tough days when it's incredibly urgent, sometimes these conversations can take place in a different frame. We see districts really thinking about how they can really do things differently and really focus in on their priorities," she said.

    In Pennsylvania, at the urging of Gov. Tom Corbett, the Legislature slashed public-education spending by roughly $900 million, or more than 10 percent, to avoid a state budget deficit for the year that began July 1 without raising taxes.

    Seemingly overnight, thousands of education jobs in the state were lost. A survey of school districts by the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators and the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials found that leading into this school year, 44 percent reduced elective course offerings and 70 percent increased class sizes. More than 30 districts said they either reduced or eliminated full-day kindergarten or pre-K programs.

    The cuts hit many of the poorer districts harder because they are more reliant on state dollars.

    In York, Pa., about a 30-minute drive from Lancaster, full-day kindergarten was saved when administrators and teachers agreed to a pay freeze. But art, music, and physical education teachers in elementary schools were eliminated, forcing classroom teachers to incorporate the electives in their classroom teaching, said Kim Schwarz, 45, a teacher and president of the York City Education Association. High school class sizes now are in the upper 30s, she said.

    Schwarz said the changes are tough for kids who really shine in art or physical education and it's been hard on the morale of teachers.

    "The district has scrimped and pulled and did everything they could to find additional funds ... and I think the teachers are doing an absolutely phenomenal job of educating the students and giving them the attention that they need given the circumstances, which just adds more to the stress and the level of exhaustion that we're all feeling," Schwarz said.

    At Keene's school in Lancaster, about 60 percent of the students are Latino and 80 percent are considered low income. Many are sent home on Friday nights with donated groceries and recipes for cooking them. Among the staff members cut was one who did home visits to follow up on children who weren't attending class. The school was able to continue an after-school program only after a non-profit agreed to run it.

    Keene said he wants his children to have a full life, and he thinks music, art and physical education are part of that. He just hopes those classes will be offered in the future.

    "You know the old adage sometimes you need to work smarter, not harder? We're frankly at a point where we just need to work harder and more hours, and with the reductions in staff, that's what needs to happen because otherwise, kids are going to suffer, and that's unacceptable," Keene said.

    _____

    Kimberly Hefling can be followed at http://twitter.com/khefling

     
    • Opinion8  •  Cedar Rapids, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Haybro --
      When you say "who is in charge?", --
      Do you mean "Who is in charge of keeping us from utterly succumbing to the Titanic Devastation wrought on us by the Republicans?"?

      WHILE the Republicans do all they can to see that NOTHING positive is done?
    • Finn  •  7 mths ago
      Having worked in education for 35 years, I can tell you where to find the money: Eliminate any position with the words 'facilitator', 'consultant', 'advisor', 'assisstant', 'co-ordinator', or 'director' in it.

      You'll be amazed how many actual teachers you can hire!
      • Patrick Murphy 7 mths ago
        I would also have local business fund all sports, includind coaches,travel insurance,etc. Just think how much money the school woud save without having to put out money for sports like lacorss.
      • David 7 mths ago
        And get rid of the cops in the schools too, there's a 40k-50k/yr bum sucking on the taxpayer tit! Cops, prisons, army crap, that's why we are going broke as a nation., We are being taxed for a lot of unnecessary services, none of which is education, I don't want to think of what the future will be like if we keep it up, "Idiocracy" the movie, I fear, will be our reality.
      • Gladys Kravitz 7 mths ago
        It's the best post so far. Administrative expenses are eating up the education budgets. Cap administrative expenses at 5 percent of the education budget.
    • Razor  •  St. Louis, United States  •  7 mths ago
      I don't see any cuts in the cushy salaries and pensions for the over-paid Administrators and Principals, but cut everything else.
      • jimb 7 mths ago
        Same with the local district here. Administrators still recieve raises while eliminating 100's of positions. It used to be the kids came first, now it's all about how much money they(admistrators) can put in their pocket. Sad but will eventually come back to bite them!
    • rbtdude  •  7 mths ago
      Why does a college administrator make 6 figures? And students can barely afford college, thats not right!
      • Orion 7 mths ago
        Why does ANY executive make 7 figures? I can't afford their cars, oil, electricity, insurance, medical care, ...
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        Orion.....move to Japan...Centrist will help you.
    • richard 32  •  Oklahoma City, United States  •  7 mths ago
      chk out the high salaries the principles and administrations are making and it will shock you it is not the lowly teachers pay it is administration wages do some resarch in your district
      • FactsMatter 7 mths ago
        You are absolutely correct. Education mirror the corporate structure. Administrator salaries have risen way out of proportion to teacher salaries, despite the fact that teachers do the real work of the school. If you only knew. . .
    • James  •  Palmdale, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Cut the schooling for illegal aliens, eliminate the dream act here in California, stop welare and medical aide for illegals and enforce immigration laws. It would save an estimated 100 million dollars a year in Los Angeles County alone.

      Cancel the foreign aide to other countries other than aide for disasters such as the earthquake in Turkey and we can save an additional 43 Billion per year. It is not hard to budget, you just have to figure out where your priorities are.

      For now it looks like bake sales will come back into fashion.
      • US Citizen 2 7 mths ago
        The dream act is a dream for teachers and Illegals, but a Nightmare for the Citizens of California.
      • Fred 7 mths ago
        Nice but never happen too many liberals and people like muslim omaba
      • Ed F. 7 mths ago
        Fred what you wrote is a lie about our president that has nothing to do with our schools
    • Ihatel33t  •  7 mths ago
      Spanish classes being cut for 7th and 8th graders. But hey, dont cut english for illegals, or any other classes to bring them up to speed(even though I thought one of the requirements to gain legal citzenship was to be able to speak english?)
    • blake  •  7 mths ago
      ID NEVER THINK OF RON PAUL AS A CANDIDATE,,,but after this policys are sounding logical......if your gonna ruin our childrens future well,......Ron where do i tick
    • America Unchained  •  Beverly Hills, United States  •  7 mths ago
      A great way to cut down on class size would be to send the children of illegal aliens back to Mexico.
    • Charles  •  7 mths ago
      Where I grew up in Seattle, more than half the budget is spent on administration. A bunch PHD's in an office building writing reports that nobody reads and going to meetings. Less than half the money even made to the local schools! AND 90% of these "educators" are extreme left-wing and they indoctrinate the kids with their "institutional" view of reality. The problem with education in America is not the "money"! The problem is a bad product that we are forced to buy.
    • 777  •  Savannah, United States  •  7 mths ago
      The public education process is broken. Hugh administrative overhead with excessive pensions costs, retrement in 25 years, seniority indexed pay scale, school complexes with masssive sports complexes, teachers that cant be fired for poor performance.... No student left behind even illegals.... We need a voucher based system and more charter schools. Public education is pathetic.
    • Robjob420  •  7 mths ago
      What I don't understand is how schools are having all these budget cut's and don't have enough money for teachers, PE and electives yet Gov. Brown in CA just made it possible for illegal immigrants to get college educations off the backs of the American tax payer. We have billion and trillions of dollars for Wars, foreign aid, bank, housing and wall street bail outs yet no money to make sure the American kids get an education this is Bull Sheet!!!
    • Cashman7323  •  Suffern, United States  •  7 mths ago
      The problem with schools is not the schools or the teachers. It's the students. A kid that comes from an unstable home with uncertain parenting, lack of rules, and a failure to teach proper moral behavior, will not learn even if Socrates himself was the teacher. This problem is systemic - beginning with LBJ and the great society.
    • The Prof.  •  7 mths ago
      Why are the schools running out of money? The schools, at least here in Ohio, get their $ through property taxes and the lottery. My property taxes are 150% what they were a few years ago, and lottery sales are supposed to be at an all-time high.Do you mean that all these new buildings and high educator and administration salaries aren't curing all the problems they claimed? Surprise. Surprise. In our small county we pay two superintendents, who knows how many assistants, six principals, etc. We should have one elementary, one middle, and one high school, all centrally located. Waste is rampant, food is thrown away by the dumpster. The new schools were built with the potential for growth when statistics show that the population in our county is shrinking. But, with new school buildings, we will see growth in the area. OK, where is it? The state is stealing the lottery money to fund other stuff, like rebuilding roadside rest buildings that are in good operating condition. The state allocated 35% of its budget to schools pre-lottery, and now 17% after lottery started. They laws say the schools MUST get all the lottery money. OK, says the state, but now you don't need our money. What's the difference. My taxes went up to fund new schools while the state stole the money that could have been used to build. No wonder people won't move here, taxes are too high. New buildings don't change the attitude of entitlement of the students and educators, etc.
    • Charles  •  7 mths ago
      How about all those phony "diplomas" the public schools have been handing out all these years? Isn't that fraud? Where I live in California they $10,000 per child per year. So...we have paid $130,000 to educate a child that upon graduation reads and writes at the 4th grade level? I would be happy to pay for education, but America ranks like 25th among nations. Yet the cost per child is the second highest in the world.
    • Karen  •  7 mths ago
      Where is all the money going that goes into the state lotteries? I thought it went into the schools? Obviously it isn't.
    • hugh jorgan  •  Denver, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Keep all those drone administrators; keep all the athletic games, the coaches, the busses to bus them all over and cut the library and art classes. Smart, hey?
    • grampy  •  7 mths ago
      The problem with "education" funding is that administrative costs are out of control. America is way behind and people's objection to more taxes is their self ingratiating perception that tax dollars only benefit the poor!
    • p  •  7 mths ago
      Maybe the federal government needs to get out of the education business all together
    • the cyclist  •  7 mths ago
      GOOD !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NOW CUT OUT THE WASTE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! STOP BUILDING TAJ MAHAL SCHOOLS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!STOP THE POLITICALLY CORRECT CRAP !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THROW THE ILLEGALS OUT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AND CUT THE NUMBER OF VICE PRINCIPALS, ASST. PRINCIPALS VICE PRINCIPAL OF TOILET PAPER DISTRIBUTION. GET BACK TO BASIC SCHOOLS WITH NECESSARY EQUIPMENT BUT NOT ALL THE EXTRA CRAP THAT STUDNETS PAID FOR IN COLLEGE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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