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Chico goes on the offensive

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* Illinois State Board of Education Chairman Gery Chico has been working editorial boards across the state lately, decrying a possible cut to education funding. The work has paid off. Here’s the Southern Illinoisan

It’s the wrong time to be looking at cuts in education. Illinois State Board of Education Chairman Gery Chico said $650 million in funding already has been cut from school districts since 2009. Chico said plans that would seek another $250 million to $750 million in cuts could be devastating in a state that already ranks near the bottom nationally in funding public education.

In just one example, looking at the potentially deepest cut of $750 million from education, funding for Murphysboro Community School District 186 would be cut from a projected $8.26 million to $6.75 million. Chico said such cuts would force local schools to cut programs, eliminate teaching jobs or raise taxes.

This is no idle threat. The Illinois House of Representatives has approved spending caps for the coming fiscal year that would cut education by nearly $260 million — even if the state successfully cuts $2.7 billion from Medicaid. The other, more-dire possibilities could see education cut by $500 million or $750 million in a state already ranked near the bottom for funding education.

“If that happens, I just think it’s devastating to school systems,” Chico said. “This is going to mean that if we continue to cut education in the state of Illinois, it’s going to reach laughable levels.”

* SJ-R

But we believe every citizen in the state should be concerned at the damage that could be inflicted on public schools statewide under a 2013 budget plan backed by the Illinois House that strips from Quinn’s plan some $258 million from education spending. We admire the goal, which is to use $800 million in 2013 tax receipts to pay off some of the state’s bill backlog, which stands at $5 billion. We question whether jeopardizing public education and endangering celebrated reforms is a worthy trade-off.

“We have to have sanity in the way we look at affecting the finances of our school system,” Illinois State Board of Education Chairman Gery Chico told The State Journal-Register editorial board last week. “That ($258 million) is real money. That means you’re either letting go teachers, cutting back programs or you’re raising taxes. Those are all the options. So it’s dramatic, it’s drastic.”

For the Springfield School District, it would mean a loss of $5.7 million. School districts simply can’t absorb cuts that size without effects that are felt in classrooms.

And all that teacher accountability? It can’t happen without an assessment program in place, and that doesn’t happen without funding.

“We had a few million dollars put in there (for assessments) and some people in the House now are talking about striking that line item,” Chico said. “I don’t know why we’re getting applause for passing one thing and then the resources for getting it done are taken out.”

The state has a huge mountain of overdue, unpaid bills to schools. The school funding cuts are supposed to be used to pare down that and other debts.

…Adding… The comptroller’s office says that the current bill backlog to schools is $561 million.

* Despite Chairman Chico’s strong opposition, some are defending the cuts

If the cuts go through, almost every district in the Stateline would feel the effects. Belvidere could lose 300-thousand dollars for the year, Winnebago over 600-thousand dollars, and Rockford would lose close to 8-millon dollars for fiscal year 2012.

“It’s not going to be pretty, but there’s really no other way,” said state senator Dave Syverson.

Syverson says out of control spending has left lawmakers will little options.

“We can’t do that anymore,” said Syverson. “You need to be honest with schools, with healthcare providers.”

And while lawmakers are still looking at other options to fill a near 3.5 billion dollar hole, Syverson says the education system in the state will likely take a hit.

“You have to cut into both when you have this big of a debt,” said Syverson.

* But the Senate Democrats’ budget plan contains no education cuts, which they believe is the right way to go. Even so, things got a bit testy in the approp committee yesterday

But Senate Republicans said Democrats should be considering cuts instead of tapping into other funds. They said they could not support the proposal because it does not put the state on a path to security after the recent income tax increase begins to roll back in 2015. “I believed that we shared brief, shining moment of optimism in the beginning of our talks,” said Sen. Pamela Althoff, a McHenry Republican. “Unfortunately as we tried to progress, we really broke down. Our conversations, they stalled over one basic staunch principle, and that was a promise of the Republican caucus to always craft a spending plan that put the state of Illinois on a trajectory to eliminate the tax increase on schedule. And what we see before us now makes [our] support of this proposal impossible, as we cannot meet that principle.” […]

Democrats said Republicans are stalling and being obstructive. Steans said that any time an agreement seemed close in negotiations, Republicans “moved the goalpost.”

Another potential sticking point is facility closures. The proposal calls for the closure of the Dwight Correctional Center, the Murray Developmental Center in Centralia, the Jacksonville Developmental Center and the Tinley Park Mental Health Center. While no Republicans spoke out adamantly against the closures at today’s hearings, Republicans on the Commission for Government Forecasting and Accountability, which takes advisory votes on facility closures, have general opposed closing downstate facilities.

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 9:58 am

Comments

  1. we were wondering when Capt Fax was going to end the embargo of Gary Chico.

    Chico is a great leader, no, make that gifted leader. We assume he will be bringing his list of what other cuts should be to pay for his extra ed spending.

    Meanwhile he might want to go back to reading old campaign memos
    Fire,Aim Ready

    Comment by CircularFiringSquad Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:06 am

  2. has comrade chico taken a pay cut?

    Comment by Shore Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:25 am

  3. Is enrollment going up or down?

    Comment by Cal Skinner Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:33 am

  4. Is Mr. Chico offering to write a check? If not, he should shut his cake hole.

    Comment by soccermom Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:35 am

  5. School enrollment is/has been fairly flat recently. But if you are trying to make a point I don’t see what it is.

    Comment by Demoralized Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:38 am

  6. Many people who highly value quality teachers and education see and understand that not all education monies are, or have been, well spent in Illinois. We have to get past the notion that the words “cut” and “spending” and “education” when used in the same sentence is always, unequivocally, a terrible thing. It’s encouraging to see that at least a few lawmakers are beginning to see the light.

    Comment by Responsa Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:50 am

  7. I’m confused…………I keep hearing this steady drum beat for increased excellence….better student performance….higher quality teachers and educational programs…the sky is falling and our schools are failing!!!Then those same people do nothing but rally behind cutting funds for education. Explain how cutting down to bare bones promotes those lofty goals. Is there some better way to fund schools that’s being kept secret?

    Comment by Inactive Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 10:59 am

  8. NIMBY

    Comment by steve schnorf Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 11:39 am

  9. Who’s Gery Chico?

    Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 12:27 pm

  10. He better focus his energy on what they are going to do if they mess with Teachers Retirement and have a large chunk of teacher retire either in the middle of the Fall Semester or Dec 31. School Districts may be left with a lot of empty positions.

    Comment by He Makes Ryan Look Like a Saint Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 2:32 pm

  11. Our state already provides the smallest proportion of education funding in the nation. We rely upon property taxes more than any other state. That leads to high property taxes and gross spending disparities between school districts.

    Comment by reformer Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 3:10 pm

  12. My suggestion for getting Republicans on board with fully funding education:

    Means Testing the school funding formula.

    That would mean that the poorest school districts would get funded first, at 100% of the EFAB recommended levels. And so on, until the middle class school districts are funded…

    Even at the governor’s appropriation levels, the money would run out about 3/4 of the way through the state.

    Which means the Top 25% wealthiest school districts would get Zero.

    Wanna guess whose districts most of those lie in?

    Republicans will find religion on new revenue pretty quick, when wealthy school districts realize the property tax hike they are in for.

    Comment by Yellow Dog Democrat Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 4:25 pm

  13. How about cutting the million dollar consulting contract with Paul Vallas Mr. Chico.

    Comment by House of Pain Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 5:04 pm

  14. Dog, as you know, the wealthy districts get very close to zero general state aid now; what is it, $50 per kid?

    Comment by steve schnorf Tuesday, May 22, 12 @ 11:43 pm

  15. Chico doesnt get paid for his position on the state board… enough with the ignorant comments

    Comment by MA Thursday, May 31, 12 @ 9:20 pm

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