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Galraedia

(5,022 posts)
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:07 PM Jan 2012

Teachers Decide To Work For Free After Budget Cuts Leave Pennsylvania School District Without Funds

The Chester Upland School District in Delaware County, Pennsylvania suffered a serious setback when Gov. Tom Corbett (R) slashed $900 million in education funds from the state budget. The cuts landed hardest on poorer districts, and Chester Upland, which predominantly serves African-American children and relies on state aid for nearly 70 percent of its funding, expects to fall short this school year by $19 million.


Faced with such a shortage of funds, the school district informed its staff that it will not be able to pay their salaries come Wednesday. So the teachers decided to work for free. As one teacher put it, students “need to be educated, so we intend to be on the job”:

At a union meeting at Chester High School on Tuesday night, the employees passed a resolution saying they would stay on “as long as we are individually able.”

Columbus Elementary School math and literacy teacher Sara Ferguson, who has taught in Chester Upland for 21 years, said after the meeting, “It’s alarming. It’s disturbing. But we are adults; we will make a way. The students don’t have any contingency plan. They need to be educated, so we intend to be on the job.”

The school board and the unions separately begged Corbett to provide financial aid for the district, but Corbett turned each request down. Pennsylvania’s Education Secretary Ron Tomalis told the board that it “had failed to properly manage its finances and would not get any additional funds.” Chester Upland was forced to lay off “40 percent of its professional staff and about half of its unionized support staff before school began last fall.” That leaves 200 professionals and 65 support staff to manage a school with class sizes of over 40 students.

Read more: http://thinkprogress.org/education/2012/01/06/399373/teachers-work-free-budget-cuts/

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Fire Walk With Me

(38,893 posts)
1. Wow. (I have a thread related to forced privatization of schools
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:10 PM
Jan 2012

but although I can see it in the search results, clicking on it produces a bug. Perhaps others will have better luck)

Search DU for "fire walk with me how the monied"

 

Fire Walk With Me

(38,893 posts)
7. Okay, thanks. It's a link to three short articles showing schools being forced into privatization
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:25 PM
Jan 2012

by the rich, about the withdrawal of government support for them resulting in a -need- for privatization.

Angry Dragon

(36,693 posts)
3. I wonder how many politicians would work for free??
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:16 PM
Jan 2012

When I read posts like this all I want to do is slap the idiots so hard that
all they can see is the vacuum inside their skull

AlinPA

(15,071 posts)
4. Corbett and the republicans will cut a lot more next year. Kindergarten will be a thing of the past
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:16 PM
Jan 2012

in PA. There will be lots of money for private schools though.

proud2BlibKansan

(96,793 posts)
5. Well I'm not surprised by the teachers
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:18 PM
Jan 2012

but I'm infuriated that they were ever faced with this choice.

What other profession would we even expect to work for FREE?

ClassWarrior

(26,316 posts)
6. Those greedy, selfish billionaire teachers??! I don't believe it.
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:20 PM
Jan 2012


Good on you Chester Upland teachers!

NNNGU.

 

southernyankeebelle

(11,304 posts)
8. Sicken. Notice where the cuts hurt the most in the poor areas where they can't fight back. Why
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:27 PM
Jan 2012

don't those good old catholics like Santorum get the rich to be taxed more to raise money to help these kids. We are on a fast track to being a 3rd world country. Republicans won't be happy until we have a Charles Dickens lifestyle.

enough

(13,256 posts)
11. An early victory in the battle to do away with public education.
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 08:46 PM
Jan 2012

So proud that my state is in the forefront.

salin

(48,955 posts)
16. IMO, this is far beyond privatization...
Fri Jan 6, 2012, 11:48 PM
Jan 2012

this is reality hitting extreme Randian ideology. For profit organizations will not continue to serve where there is no profit.

In my opinion this is more about where the Don't tax anyone or any entity that has money (per the clearly dis-proved theory of trickle down). At some point there is no money to provide basic services.

If I read the Philly article correctly, the initial lay-offs lead to a teacher per pupil ratio of 40:1. For those teachers who "volunteer" to work without pay. I doubt that a whole lot of folks can afford to work with no pay (and presumably no benefits) for very long.

In my opinion this is a story about how the Randian GOP extremism remakes our society. Taxes are lower than in other industrialized/developed county, but provide minimal services - such as no public schools. Because clearly a public school system cannot be maintained by volunteers.

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