home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!seas.smu.edu!utacfd.uta.edu!news.oc.com!lgc.com!cs.utexas.edu!ut-emx!ibmchs!auschs!awdprime.austin.ibm.com!ekhadafi.austin.ibm.com!curt
- From: curt@ekhadafi.austin.ibm.com (Curt Finch 903 2F021 curt@aixwiz.austin.ibm.com 512-838-2806)
- Newsgroups: tx.politics
- Subject: TX school Funding Fiasco
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.132435.16510@awdprime.austin.ibm.com>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 13:24:35 GMT
- Sender: news@awdprime.austin.ibm.com (USENET News)
- Distribution: tx
- Organization: IBM AWD, Austin
- Lines: 148
-
-
- --- Wednesday --- November 18, 1992 --- Vol. 2 --- No. 117 ---
-
- D #### ##### #### ### #### #### ##### ### #### ####
- A ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
- I #### #### #### ## ## #### ## ## ##### #### ## ##
- L ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
- Y ## ## ##### ## ### ## ## ## ##### ## ## ## ## ####
-
- THE NATIONAL UPDATE ON AMERICA'S EDUCATION GOALS
- An APN publication, supported by The Annie E. Casey Foundation
- and the Business Coalition for Education Reform
- __________ __________
- | SPOTLIGHT |
- | |
- | WILL THE DOG HUNT? |
- | |
- | A Texas amendment to |
- | recapture funds from |
- | wealthy school districts |
- | passed the Senate and |
- | awaits House approval. And |
- | Texas Gov. Richards tries |
- | to cut spending by auditing |
- | school districts. (#9) |
- | |
- | But many Texans say those |
- | dogs won't hunt. |
- | |
- | Why? A Houston parents |
- | group says officials are |
- | lookin' for equity |
- | solutions in all the wrong |
- | places. The group |
- | recommends shifting |
- | the burden of school |
- | finance from property taxes |
- | to state sources. |
- | |
- | Other critics say the |
- | audit is a politically |
- | motivated "witch hunt." |
- | |
- | A solution, says Rep. |
- | Culberson (R), is to "get |
- | school finance out of the |
- | courthouse." (DRC 11/13) |
- |_____________________________|
-
- ============== QUOTE OF THE DAY ==============
- "We have got to show the taxpayers that we are spending our
- school dollars wisely, that Jay Leno tickets don't make the cut."
- -- Texas Gov. Ann Richards on why she calls for an audit of each
- school district. (#9)
- _______________________________________________________________
- | (c) 1992 by the American Political Network, Inc. |
- | 282 N. Washington St., Falls Church, VA (703) 237-5130 |
- | APN, Inc. hereby authorizes further reproduction and |
- | distribution with proper acknowledgment. |
- | Publisher: Barbara A. Pape |
- | Editor: Richard R. Hough |
- | Managing Editor: Angela R. Heffernan |
- | Senior Staff Writer: Sarita M. Wilson |
- | Editorial Assistants: Daniel B. Conkright, Cecilia Serrano |
- |_______________________________________________________________|
-
-
-
- ===== A LOCAL LOOK =====
-
- *4 EDUCATION FIRST: TEXAS RESTAURANT ASSOC. HELPS STUDENTS
- Students who work in restaurants will be required to get
- good grades according to a voluntary Texas Restaurant Assoc.
- program (AP/FT. WORTH STAR TELEGRAM). Employers in the Education
- First program could help, for example, by arranging a more
- flexible schedule for students in academic trouble.
- "[The program is] designed to encourage the thousands of
- young people who work in the food service industry to stay in
- school and realize their full potential," said Gov. Ann Richards
- (D) a supporter of Education First.
- The association also proposes incentives for students with
- high grades such as free movie tickets. Association President
- Bill Daniel said 120 of the group's 6,000 members already have
- signed-up to participate in the program.
- Employers will enter into an informal contract with parents
- and schools to require students to maintain good grades to keep
- their job, according to the newspaper. School will notify
- parents and employers if a student falls behind in coursework.
- Students could loose their jobs if their grades do not improve
- within a period of time, reports the TELEGRAM.
- Daniel: "The intent is to make sure that the student's No.1
- priority is always getting a good education." (11/17)
-
- ===== LINE-ITEM LEARNING =====
-
- *9 A WARNING FROM THE TEXAS GOV.: THE STAKES ARE TOO HIGH
- Texas Gov. Ann Richards (D) "warned" House Democrats
- yesterday that the "political and economic stakes are too high to
- risk allowing schools to close in the fight over public
- education," writes the DALLAS MORNING NEWS (Slater/Stutz, 11/17).
- She urged the House to approve a proposed constitutional
- amendment that allows the redistribution of public funds among
- school districts (See DRC 11/17, #11). The State Senate already
- approved the plan by a vote of 29 to 2 (See DRC 11/13, #5).
- Richards, Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock and House Speaker Gib Lewis
- (D) Monday also said they will seek audits of each of the state's
- school districts (multi cites). Their request falls on the heels
- of an audit report of 55 districts released last week.
- According to a report from the State Auditor's Office,
- "Texas can save $642M annually by 1997 without sacrificing
- educational quality," writes the HOUSTON POST (Selby, 11/17).
- The report also criticized districts for wasteful spending on
- travel, overstaffing, "exorbitant" legal fees and other non-
- instructional costs, reports the DALLAS MORNING NEWS.
- Gov. Richards, referring to findings in the audit report
- said: "We have got to show the taxpayers that we are spending
- our school dollars wisely, that Jay Leno tickets don't make the
- cut."
- But critics called the audits a "witch hunt" that is
- politically motivated, according to the AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN
- (Brooks, 11/17). Auditors questioned about 4% of the money spent
- by school districts, the newspaper reports. "That looks like we
- scored 98%. That's an A in anyone's book," commented Craig
- Foster, exec. director of the Equity Center, a coalition of
- property-poor school districts that opposes the Fair Share Plan.
- Meanwhile, a Houston parents' group is petitioning the
- Legislature to "shift the school funding burden in Texas from
- local property owners to state sources (HOUSTON CHRONICLE,
- Markley, 11/17). The N.Y. TIMES reports that Foster said, "[The
- Governor's plan] is an attempt to get everything out of the local
- property tax before they bite the bullet on state taxes."
- (Cellis, 11/18)
-
- _______________________________________________________________
- | |
- | FAX your same-day news clips, commentary, releases to |
- | the DAILY REPORT CARD at (800) 722-5569 or (703) 237-5286. |
- |_______________________________________________________________|
-
-
-
- -30-
-
- --
- --
- curt@aixwiz.austin.ibm.com (Curt L. Finch) | AIX NFS/NIS Field Quality
- My views are unrelated to those of IBM | Austin, TX
- Lead_or_Leave's objective is to get all Congressmen to sign a pledge
-