I know many of us have kids in the California School system. This is very very important. When the Governor gets more letters to save the forests than to save our schools, we have a problem!
The Governor's Budget Flunks the Basic Test of Government: It Hurts Our Children
The California State PTA is opposing the governor's proposed budget for 2008-09 because it would harm the
youngest and most vulnerable in our state: our children. The proposed budget would make across-the-board
cuts to education, healthcare and other programs that have a direct impact on the safety and well-being of
California's children. Below is a list of budget cuts as proposed by the Governor. As the budget gets debated
in Sacramento, we must make sure our children's voices are heard.
Cuts to Schools
Given that California has among the lowest per-pupil funding and largest class sizes in the country, the
Governor's proposed budget reductions would make a bad situation even worse, and they are fundamentally
inconsistent with the state's goal of improving student achievement. The Governor is proposing a $4.4 billion
cut to school funding. This could result in the loss of tens of thousands of teachers and increased class sizes
throughout the state, not to mention a further erosion of programs and the support system for students
provided by special education aides, reading specialists, counselors and other support personnel.
Cuts to Foster Care Programs
Current foster care reimbursement rates are already woefully inadequate. The proposed cuts would ultimately
hurt children and lead to fewer families taking in children who have been abused and neglected.
Cuts to Child Welfare Services
The proposed 10% reduction to funding for child welfare services would cause an accompanying loss of
federal funds, thus compounding the negative impacts. These cuts would endanger the health and safety of
thousands of neglected and abused children. It would mean the loss of more than a thousand social workers
whom children now rely on to investigate reports of abuse and neglect, provide family maintenance services
and reunite families.
Cuts to CalWORKs Program that Supports Low Income Families
Research links outcomes for children to the types of sanctions proposed by the administration. Enacting
policies that drop children from CalWORKs and reduce the amount of resources available to their families
would exacerbate the situation and reduce the likelihood of these families becoming self-sufficient.
Cuts to California Children's Services (CCS) Health Care Program
The proposed cuts to CCS could drastically affect the health care services provided to the severely ill children
served by this program. Medical Therapy cuts would result in longer waiting lists for children to receive
physical therapy. Delays in providing timely medical care to CCS children could result in greater emergency
room usage.
Cuts to Medi-Cal Administrative Cuts
Nearly 160,000 Medi-Cal children would be required to re-apply for eligibility every three months, instead of
the current annual requirement. While increasing the administrative burden, the budget proposal would at the
same time reduce administrative funding. The result would be gaps in - or the loss of - healthcare coverage
for some of the most vulnerable and needy children in California.
Cuts to Juvenile Rehabilitation Facilities and Crime Prevention Grants
The proposed $20 million reduction in funds for the Juvenile Probation and Camps program could mean
closure or service reduction of county-operated residential facilities. Displaced wards would be placed in
group homes, thereby increasing impacts on the foster care program. The $11.9 million proposed cut to the
Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Grant program would cause gaps in the continuum of services that counties
have established to prevent, control and treat juvenile offenders.
Cuts to Early Childhood Education/Child Care
The proposed $198.9 million reduction for child development programs, as well as subsidy criteria changes,
translates into nearly 106,000 children losing access to pre-school and after-school programs, and services that
assist with disabilities.
Our children did not create this financial crisis. Their future should not be undermined because of it.
Sorry. I totally support the governor. "The Kids"--as you call them are--at least half of them--children of wetbacks who do not belong in the school system or in this country period.
If you really want to balance the budget you had better resurrect prop 187 and ammend the state constitution--if necessary--to get it into law.
I pray to God every day that real estate prices in the state continue to drop so the sheep (your constituents) will wake up. During the last depression in 1930 California picked up all the wet backs, put them on busses, and shipped them back to where they belong. So maybe a depression will be a good thing.