Translation of the funding fight

Bob Braun’s column today cut through the nonsense and offered a basic translation of the arguments made yesterday before the state Supreme Court. The issue, as he pointed out, is a political one:

Here’s the real question: Will a court under siege buy into the governor’s political views about spending or will it find the collective nerve to tell Chris Christie his oath of office requires him to obey all constitutional mandates, including the one to maintain a thorough and efficient school system?

It’s simple: Without the justices’ permission, the governor’s budget, adopted by the Legislature, cut $1 billion from a school aid formula the court, just a year before, ruled constitutional if funded. To cut that billion, Christie—and lawmakers—had to make choices.

Like not raising taxes on rich people. A political choice.

Braun’s point, essentially, is that all budgeting choices are political choices, meaning they come down to specific policies and priorities. The governor opted to slash school spending rather than ask New Jersey’s top tax bracket to pay a bit more to fund government.

As Braun points out — and I’ve written numerous times — our elected officials at all levels of government balance myriad interests in crafting budgets. What is a permissible level of taxation? Who should pay? How? What kinds of programs should we provide? Which should get more money and which should get less? These are political questions and need to be hashed out in the political arena, honestly and openly.

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  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. It can be ordered here.
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Bashing the public schools

More from The Star-Ledger’s Bob Braun on the Facebook Newark grant and the disingenuousness of school reformers, who refuse to let the facts get in the way of their bashing of public schools.

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  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. it can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

Dispatches: Keeping the public in public education

This week’s Dispatches column focuses on the school reform movement — which seems to have as its aim the dismantling of public education.

Here is something that ran Tuesday on the Education Week Web site from Diane Ravitch, a former charter supporter who has come around to see the reform movement for what it is.

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  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. it can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

The false promise of education reform

Bob Braun continues his excellent string of columns on education, reminding his readers that comparing education spending district to district can be a foolish and misleading enterprise just as the assault on public education and the call for massive restructuring of schools is foolish and counterproductive.

  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. it can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

More on the Newark grant and what it means

I should have passed along this column from The Star-Ledger’s Bob Braun, who has been covering Newark schools for years. He sums up the basic concerns as well as anything I’ve read so far.

  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. it can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.