SACRAMENTO
- Jo A.S. Loss, president of California State PTA, issued the following
statement in response to the Governor's
May Revision of the
2010-2011
budget proposal.
The
Governor continues to propose cuts to education, children's programs and
critical social services that are intolerable and
unconscionable. The first
responsibility of our elected officials is to meet the fundamental needs
of all
of our children, including a quality education.
The
Governor stated that a budget should be a reflection of what we value
most.
Yet, his proposal does not at all support what Californians care about
most:
our children.
The Governor also spoke
about the need to create jobs and stimulate our economy.
Healthy, well educated students are critical for a strong economy.
Any
responsible approach to solving the
current fiscal crisis requires a balanced approach, including additional
revenues. These brutal cuts jeopardize the future of our children and
the
future of our state.
We
are deeply disturbed that the Governor's May Revision chooses to solve
the
state's current fiscal crisis with massive cuts. This was not the
only option. Choosing to impose these cuts on our children is unacceptable.
We call upon
all Californians to speak up and
demand a budget that invests in and meets the needs of California's 9
million
children.
We
have seen more than $17 billion in cuts to public education in the last
two
years. The
Governor's May revision proposes to continue cutting education funding at the same levels as proposed in January. Class sizes are increasing, and we are already losing
arts, music,
gifted programs and extra-curricular activities. Our most vulnerable
students
are losing academic support programs and intervention services. School
libraries are closing or reducing the hours they are available to
students.
Already among the last in the nation in the number of nurses, librarians
and
counselors per student, we are losing even more of these critical
members of
our education communities.
PTA
is equally worried about the threats to the health, safety and
well-being of
California's children. Eliminating CalWORKS and decimating child care and other programs as proposed in the May revision will have a devastating effect.
The
people of California want a budget that reflects their values. 79
percent of California voters
are opposed to making further cuts to public schools to reduce the state
budget
deficit. A majority of Californians believe that there is not enough
state
funding going to public schools, and 66 percent would be willing to pay
higher taxes to maintain
current funding for public schools.
Business
officials agree that investing in education is critical. Top
Silicon Valley business leaders note that
improving K-12 education is one of the most important things the state
should
do to improve the business climate. Good
schools are needed to recruit the best employees.
The
future prosperity of our state requires a well-educated workforce able
to
compete in the global economy. Brutal cuts to our schools and critical
services
to children jeopardize California's future.