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'KILLER' FOR SCHOOLS
HOW $5.2 BILLION BUDGET CUT IS LIKELY TO
AFFECT LOCAL PROGRAMS
JESSICA PORTNER, Mercury News
A $5.2 billion cut in education funding. Six percent
across the board. Four hundred dollars less per student
per year.
Right now, they're just numbers. But in coming months,
school districts up and down California will have to
translate them into paper, pencils and people.
To get an early sense of the impact, the Mercury News
is zeroing in on San Jose's Franklin-McKinley Elementary
School District, which serves more than 10,000 mostly
poor children on the East Side. It is one of 1,300 school
districts in the state, each of which will have to balance
its own budget. But in most of those districts, the
human and educational effects of the proposed cuts will
probably play out in similar fashion.
Franklin-McKinley stands to lose $4 million this year
from an $80 million budget if Davis' plan wins legislative
approval. That figure is the equivalent of eliminating
textbooks for nearly half the students, or firing nearly
half of all the secretaries, bus drivers and cafeteria
workers. The $4 million translates into about a third
of health benefits for all 900 employees, or the salaries
of 1 in 10 teachers districtwide.
''These are very, very, very hard times,'' said Larry
Aceves, the district's superintendent, who confesses
he hasn't slept well since early December worrying about
where the governor's budget ax would fall. ''It's like
I have become the angel of death. We are going to lose
people, and I have no choices. It's going to be killer.''
In one of the deepest education cuts in California
history, Davis on Friday proposed slashing kindergarten-through-12th-grade
funding by $5.2 billion over the next 18 months. The
self-professed education governor said he could no longer
cushion schools when faced with a ballooning budget
deficit.
The bulk of the education cuts are ''across-the-board''
reductions, meaning that school districts would be able
to decide what to slash in order tobalance their budgets.
But Davis also took some specific actions, freezing
cost-of-living adjustments for school employees, and
slashing funding for dozens of programs from transportation
to school safety and teacher training.
Davis attempted to make it easier for schools to absorb
these cuts by loosening state regulations that restrict
districts' financial flexibility. His budget plan would
collapse 64 ''categorical'' programs covering everything
from libraries to school safety to technology into a
large block grant that schools can use as they see fit.
Davis' budget blueprint also calls for the Legislature
to relax the requirement that districts maintain a 3
percent cash reserve.
Aceves said that given the serious budget crisis and
the fact that education funds are nearly half the state's
budget, school funds had to take a hit. But he doubted
that budgetary flexibility alone would do much to take
the sting out of the governor's plans -- especially
for Silicon Valley's poorest districts.
Aceves already has canceled spending on conferences,
nixed all school field trips not paid for by fundraisers,
and cut down on paper, pencils -- even multicolored
yarn for art classes.
And he knows that won't be nearly enough.
''Those are nice, but the issue for us is now survival,''
said Aceves.
Aceves said he may have to expand class sizes in some
grades or lay off secretaries, custodians or clerks.
Aceves, like most educators, says he has fewer opportunities
to trim this year because nearly all of the district's
budget is tied up in hiring teachers whose contracts
prohibit them from being let go mid-year. Teachers,
whose salaries constitute 60 percent of Aceves' budget,
are shielded from the current-year cuts because state
law requires districts to give teachers five months'
notice before they are laid off.
So Aceves will have to make the most significant cuts
in the upcoming school year.
Louise Persson, the principal of Franklin School, is
already looking for ways to scrimp. She's using cheaper
paper, rationing photocopying, buying longer-lasting
markers and trying to get local companies to donate
supplies.
''Any budget cutback, particularly a major one, will
have major effect,'' said Persson, ''But we are not
panicking. We have a serious challenge but we are going
to meet it.'' Rafael Cruz, principal of Sylvandale Middle
School, said that while the district's budget-cutting
plan has yet to be determined, he frets that his school's
academic and social services will suffer. He dreads
losing the technological consultant for the school's
new library, for example, or losing a school counselor.
''In middle schools, there are suicides, pregnant teens,
and sometimes a counselor is first person in need to
turn to. Not having that person available for a crisis
is a scary possibility,'' he said.
''Whatever happens, this is going to mean a real big
cutback in services for kids.''
San Jose Mercury News (CA)
January 14, 2003
Section: Front
Edition: Morning Final
Page: 1A
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