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passing notes > Seminole UniServ > Seminole GetsActive > Vouchers, RTTT, other Bad Policies, and the Folks Who Want Them
Chris Spiliotis
Here's a must read essay by a fellow teacher in Miami. Paul has granted me permission to post it here. Please pass it on.

Chris
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During his eight-year reign as governor of Florida, Jeb Bush seeded the ground for the bitter harvest we Floridians are about to reap. His handiwork is poised now to devastate this state and visit unprecedented suffering on its people. It will be a nightmare, part of which will imperil the public schools, the operation of local governments and the state retirement system.

The government of the State of Florida realizes most of its revenues by way of sales and use taxes, intangible taxes and corporate income taxes. Sales and use taxes are the most regressive and hit poor, working and retired people the hardest. These taxes have done nothing but increase and when they are discussed it is in the context of raising them.

Meanwhile, if he could have, Jeb Bush would have relieved Florida’s wealthy persons and corporate entities of their entire tax burden. As it stands he came very near his goal. Tax loopholes created during his administration for corporate income now shelter between $500 and $600 million that was counted as revenue before. $600 million more was lost to the state when Bush eliminated the tax on intangible properties (stocks and bonds) in January 2007.

Jeb Bush tried to privatize all things profitable and make the people assume all risk associated with investment. His program gave a leg up to charter schools and turned elements of the state’s water supply, public roads and social services over to wealthy investors. The lynchpin of his healthcare agenda was to turn Medicaid into a private managed health care system. That program was piloted in five counties. The Department of Children and Families was turned into a massive private gamble that money could be made off Florida’s most vulnerable children.

When investments went bad the working people of Florida ate the loss. In 2002 the state’s short-term investment and pension funds lost $334 million as Enron collapsed, three times the loss of any other fund in the nation. Jeb Bush’s minions invested in Edison charter schools when the stock was valued at $37 and got out when it was worth 14 cents. Another $500 million of the public’s money was lost to enable other corporate adventures.

But the worst was yet to come! Because although term limits forced Jeb Bush to give up his Tallahassee office in 2006, it did not thwart his determination to keep the apparatus of state government under his control. Gov. Charlie Crist can only dream of having as much influence in this state as Jeb Bush. Bush handed his sword over to Speaker Marco Rubio to control the Florida House of Representatives. He moved Sen. Alex Villalobos into a broom closet and out of the line of succession to be President of the Florida Senate. His minions are shot through the Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission and so in November we will be voting on draconian property tax cuts to kill the public schools and vouchers to boost the private schools. He put one of his stooges, Coleman Stipanovich, in charge of making decisions for the multi-billion dollar Local Government Investment Pool and the Florida Retirement System. Then he got himself a spot on the Board of Directors of Lehman Brothers, the giant Wall Street financial services corporation.

The now resigned Stipanovich made $1.5 billion in bad investments, $842 million of them purchased through Lehman Brothers. The pension fund now holds $756 million in worthless paper related to the housing market meltdown, almost 8% of its cash holdings. The state’s short-term investment fund is faced with similar losses. Jeb Bush and Lehman Brothers won't be losing any sleep over it though because the vulnerability has been dumped on Florida’s 1.1 million current and retired state workers, hundreds of school districts and local governments, the state-created Citizens Property Insurance, and the state treasury.

This fiscal year the state treasury suffered the first waves of the tsunami that is coming. The servile Florida State Legislature was called back into special session barely six months after passing a $71 billion 2007 fiscal year budget to address a 1.1 billion dollar revenue shortfall. On that count, among other blows to the weakest and most vulnerable among us, these servants of the wealthy took $100 from each of Florida’s public school children to balance their budget. The lights had not been turned out in the Capitol Building when the Office of Policy and Budget projected an additional $2.5 billion revenue shortfall over the next 18 months.

Now the state finds itself in a $5 billion revenue hole and the proposed budget for this fiscal year is a crystal clear road map to where Bush's Florida is headed. The public school system will be closed down! Accommodations for our children are being made in sparkling new prisons. Out of work teachers will turn their kids over to newly hired prison guards.

Under the conditions they are creating the Legislature anticipates an explosion in Florida's prison population--107,000 inmates by June 2009. So they have earmarked $305 million to build one new private and two new public prisons and hire 1,000 new prison guards. Meanwhile, the public schools will suffer a $2.3 billion reduction in funding. That comes to another $140 less per child for education. There is actually $10 million less for the construction of K-12 school buildings than for prison buildings.

The Secretary of Florida's Department of Children and Families Robert Butterworth has called this budget the equivalent of "a contract on kids." In so many words, the Secretary is saying that kids are going to die. These children will be the battered human faces of these legislative choices. And they are choices! The taxes on wealthy Floridians and on corporations could have been restored to pre-Jeb Bush rates. The intangibles tax on stock and bond holders too. Schools could have been put before jails. Teachers and school bus drivers could have been funded before new prison guards even became necessary.

Paul A. Moore

Teacher, Miami Carol City Senior High School

Chris Spiliotis
"Millions of dollars for prisons, sure. Money for schools, not so much. The lock-'em-up Florida Legislature is set to approve a budget that includes $305 million to build three new prisons. At the same time, spending for public schools would be cut by $332 million. Hello. It's cheaper to educate the state's children -- which leads to a good job and a stable life -- than it is to put a criminal behind bars. Apparently, that message hasn't sunk in with the dunderheads in Tallahassee. This isn't a decrease in hoped for spending, which is sometimes the case in budgetary sleight of hand. These cuts are real."

-- Florida Times-Union columnist Ron Littlepage, who quotes extensively from Andy Ford's statement issued yesterday.

http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/...273832999.shtml
Chris Spiliotis
“The title of the Taxation and Budget Reform Commission evidently has no bearing on its purpose. Members refuse to be confined by that mission statement. They veered off into the ideological realm by foisting a pair of constitutional amendments onto November's ballot that would permit the state to pay for private-school vouchers. They accomplished that without using the V-word, too. Our tax dollars at work, undermining our public schools. … Though voucher proponents cast their zeal in the shining light of a better education for all students, this is just a way for rich people to subsidize their children's private schooling. Would right-wing Republicans ever push for vouchers if they truly benefited the poor? No. This is a cynical attempt to undermine public education and further divide the classes. Voters should reject both amendments come November. Until then, Florida will be at the forefront of the national brawl over vouchers.”

-- Bradenton Herald editorial

http://www.bradenton.com/opinion/story/568649.html

Chris Spiliotis
“‘School vouchers get on ballot,’ declared a Herald-Tribune headline. It's true: A proposal to reinstate public funding of private-school vouchers was approved last week for placement on the Nov. 4 ballot in Florida. But there's more to the story than the headline and the voucher initiative -- much, much more. The voucher and another proposal would, if approved by voters: Eliminate a wise, time-honored clause in the Florida Constitution that prevents government revenue from being "taken from the public treasury ... in aid of any church, sect or religious denomination or in aid of any sectarian institution." Undermine the constitutional requirement that the state fulfill its "paramount duty" to provide all children residing in Florida with the opportunity to obtain a high-quality education in public schools. These proposed changes to the state constitution are as radical as they are unwise.”

-- Sarasota Herald-Tribune editorial

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20080...387/1627/NEWS02

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