[Vision2020] Otter Plan Steers Money to Roads, Not Schools
Sunil Ramalingam
sunilramalingam at hotmail.com
Fri Mar 13 09:00:27 PDT 2009
Food banks.
Sunil
Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 07:30:46 -0700
From: donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
To: vision2020 at moscow.com; thansen at moscow.com
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Otter Plan Steers Money to Roads, Not Schools
I wanted to ask the Governor where we were going to go on these new roads if we have no jobs or schools?
Best Regards,
Donovan
--- On Fri, 3/13/09, Tom Hansen <thansen at moscow.com> wrote:
From: Tom Hansen <thansen at moscow.com>
Subject: [Vision2020] Otter Plan Steers Money to Roads, Not Schools
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Date: Friday, March 13, 2009, 6:33 AM
"Otter called for the school cuts along with keeping in reserve about half
the stimulus money Idaho will receive for schools, plus the state’s $114
million education reserve fund, as a hedge against further economic
downturns.
. .
House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, offered this analogy: 'If
you have a sick family member and money in the bank, to say, 'Well, don’t
take care of the sick family member, let’s save the money in case they get
sicker' – that just doesn’t make sense to us.'"
Courtesy of today's (March 13, 2009)
--------------------------------------------------
Otter plan steers money to roads, not schools
BOISE – Gov. Butch Otter’s plan to boost road spending three different
ways but cut education sent Idaho lawmakers reeling Thursday, with some
saying the governor’s right and others calling for “middle ground.”
“I applaud the governor in his desire to protect the infrastructure of the
state – that’s important. But the infrastructure of the state is not just
roads – it’s corrections, it’s state police, it’s education,” said
state
Senate Finance Chairman Dean Cameron, R-Rupert. “We can’t afford to let
that infrastructure slide. We only get a chance once to educate a child in
the first grade or to teach ’em to read. If we fail in that
infrastructure, it’ll be much more painful … than in roads.”
Otter detailed his plans for spending more than $1.2 billion in federal
economic stimulus money Thursday and sent his budget chief, Wayne Hammon,
to present the plan to lawmakers.
Sen. Nicole LeFavour, D-Boise, told Hammon, “You want to increase taxes
for roads, spend stimulus for roads, borrow for roads and cut education. …
I’m truly trying to understand … (why the governor would want) to have
education suffer that much.”
Hammon responded, “Nobody likes cutting budgets. The governor believes
that fixing our infrastructure is an immediate need, that we must do
something.”
Schools are being protected from cuts in the current year, Hammon said;
they’ll experience cuts next year like all other state agencies.
In a news conference Thursday, Otter defended his plan, which calls for
going beyond the unprecedented $62 million in cuts to public schools next
year outlined by state Superintendent Tom Luna, to also trim another $47
million by including schools in a statewide, 5 percent cut in personnel
funding.
“You’ve got to remember, 87 percent of school costs are personnel,” the
governor said. “It’s just, you’ve got to go where the money is.”
Sen. Joyce Broadsword, R-Sagle, said the governor’s right. “They are a
part of the economy. They need to understand that everybody needs to share
in that burden,” she said, adding that her local school officials have
informed her they’re ready to do their part.
State Rep. George Eskridge, R-Dover, said the governor’s going in “the
right direction.” He said, “I’m really concerned about the economy –
every
morning all I hear is bad news. Education is 50 percent of our budget and
I don’t see any way to get out of this without doing that.”
Otter called for the school cuts along with keeping in reserve about half
the stimulus money Idaho will receive for schools, plus the state’s $114
million education reserve fund, as a hedge against further economic
downturns.
Legislative Democrats objected to the magnitude of education cuts compared
to the reserves the state would hold.
House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, offered this analogy: “If
you have a sick family member and money in the bank, to say, ‘Well, don’t
take care of the sick family member, let’s save the money in case they get
sicker’ – that just doesn’t make sense to us.”
Cameron, who chairs the Legislature’s joint budget committee, said, “My
preference isn’t to hit education that hard, but the committee will have
to decide where it goes.” He predicted, “We’ll find middle ground.”
Otter also flatly rejected a proposal from members of the House GOP
leadership to use a big chunk of the economic stimulus money for corporate
tax cuts.
“Listen, they’ve got a lot of different ideas over there,” Otter said.
“I
didn’t see it putting jobs on the street, I didn’t see it putting people
to work.” He said if he were in business now and he got a tax break, “I’m
gonna put it in my pocket.” That doesn’t create jobs, he said, and the
role of the stimulus is to “stimulate the economy right now.”
--------------------------------------------------
Seeya round town, Moscow.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
Join us at The First Annual Intolerista Wingding, April 17th, featuring
Roy Zimmerman and Jeanne McHale. For details go to . . .
http://www.MoscowCares.com/Wingding
Seeya
there.
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