It’s not math. It’s priorities.

by | Sep 18, 2014 | 2014 Elections, Editor's Blog, Education, US Senate | 1 comment

Seems Thom Tillis and the GOP are upset about the Democratic ads claiming Republicans cut $500 million from education. They claim the ads are false and cite several fact checkers that have cast doubt about the numbers. Yesterday, John Hood of the John Locke Foundation took on the argument.

The problem with John’s point is that he compares spending from the last time Democrats were in control. He should start it from the last budget before the Great Recession. Democrats spent less on education in 2009-10 and they paid a heavy price in November 2010. Remember?

Democrats reach the $500 million number by comparing funding levels. They argue that if spending had been consistent, taking into account inflation and population growth, the GOP should have allocated $500 million more to public schools. If it had been up to me, I wouldn’t have used the number; not because it’s wrong, but because it’s muddled. It gives the Republicans a talking point that they shouldn’t have.

The Republicans can dispute the $500 million, but they can’t dispute less money is going into classrooms. Under GOP control, per pupil spending has dropped to 48th in the nation. Our teachers were among the lowest paid in the country and states like Texas set up job fairs to lure them away with better pay and working conditions. As Philip Price, chief financial officer for the Department of Public Instruction said, “If you back out the funding added for benefit cost increases and salary adjustments, the funding available for classroom activities – textbooks, transportation, teacher assistants, teachers, etc. – has been reduced by over $1 billion.” That’s billion–with a b.  

The other muddled number in the education debate is the 7% raise that Tillis claims he and the legislature gave teachers. McCrory claims the raise was 5.5% but teachers who have been in the classroom for a long time didn’t see that much. The GOP revamped the pay schedule, which may be a good thing in the long run, but it front loaded the pay increases to benefit new teachers the most. The ones who have labored under subpar pay the longest, got screwed.
In his commercial, Thom Tillis says that Kay Hagan has a math problem. But it’s not about math. It’s about priorities. In 2013, the GOP underfunded our public schools and stiffed our teachers. At the same time, they gave a massive tax cut to the rich and corporations. They made a choice and our kids and schools lost out.

1 Comment

  1. Someone from Main Street NC

    Tillis lied about his college degree. He’s lying about the massive increase in funding to NC education. Clearly, he wants to claim education as a priority – but doesn’t really want to invest in it.

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