Friday, December 19, 2008

Gregoire's Budget

By Evan Rohar

She said it was going to be ugly and it is. Given the speculation, some aspects are surprising. The main thing to remember while reading about Gregoire's budget proposal, however, is that it does not cover the further losses to revenue that are expected in the February forecast. There are $3.5 billion in cuts so far, but this is just a first shot. While K-12 and higher education were not hit as hard as expected, health and human services were cut to the bone. Each of the following selections is from the Seattle Times article on the budget proposal. We'll take them on point by point ("Public safety" is left out for now due to its controversial nature. However, no matter what its fate, workers in correctional facilities, etc. still need good, living-wage jobs).

"Health and human services: $1.4 billion

Reductions include cutting $500 million from state programs that provide health care for children, the poor and the disabled. The cuts could eliminate health-care services for 46,000 people.

"Other cuts include eliminating the General Assistance-Unemployable program, which provides a temporary safety net for people unable to work because of mental or physical disabilities. That would save more than $160 million.

"In addition, the governor proposes a 5 percent cut in the amount of money the state provides to nursing homes to take care of Medicaid patients, saving the state $46 million." ("Gregoire releases slimmed-down state budget," 12/18/08)

This was by far the most surprising element of the budget cuts and the most draconian. In the coming period, the ranks of the working poor will swell, creating greater demand for state health plans and services. The most troubling thing about this is that it hits hardest those who are most disenfranchised. Cutting health services to children, the elderly, and the "disabled" should be completely out of the question even in troubled economic times.

"Pay raises: $682 million

"The governor would eliminate proposed pay increases for state workers and teachers. The state employee pay raises were negotiated between the governor and state worker unions, but haven't yet been approved by the Legislature. Initiative 732, approved by voters in 2000, requires annual salary increases for teachers to be pegged to inflation. However, the Legislature can suspend the initiative with a simple majority vote.

"However the state would provide the additional money needed to continue paying 88 percent of the health-insurance premiums for state employees, as required by their contracts." (Ibid.)

State jobs are some of the few living-wage jobs left in Washington (see the Seattle PI article, "New jobs offer less than living wage"). Reducing the number of good-paying jobs by freezing the wages of state workers makes little sense in this economic environment. Furthermore, the governor already negotiated wages and benefits for state workers during collective bargaining with their unions. The legislature should not renege on contracts that were negotiated in good faith.

Initiative 732 should not be suspended. Teachers are already underpaid for the amount of work they do and the cost of the education required to become certified. The Seattle Times seems to suggest in the last sentence above that state workers shouldn't have good health insurance. All workers deserve good health insurance.

"Public schools: $610 million

"Cuts include a 33 percent reduction in levy equalization payments to public schools. This money helps support about 200 school districts that have small property-tax bases to rely on. It would save the state $125 million.

"In addition, the governor would save $178 million with a 24 percent cut in funding for Initiative I-728, which was approved by voters in 2000 to reduce class sizes. Many schools use the money to hire more staff and pay for training and other programs." (Ibid.)

The levy system is already an inequitable way of dividing up money for public schools. Decreasing money for levy equalization will put currently under-funded rural and inner-city schools into dire straits. Also, with schools and classes already overcrowded, laying off teachers whose positions were funded by I-728 must be taken off the table. Neither teachers nor students can afford a reduction in State funding for public K-12 education.

"Higher education: both cuts and tuition increases

"The governor would cut $216 million — 13 percent — from the budget for four-year public universities. Two-year community colleges would be cut by 6 percent, or $110 million. The cuts are expected to result in larger class sizes and faculty layoffs. Gregoire suggests letting the colleges and universities decide if they need to reduce enrollment to maintain quality.

"Community colleges were spared the deepest cuts because the governor's office felt those institutions will get the brunt of laid-off workers heading back to college for retraining.

"Universities would be allowed to increase tuition by 7 percent, which would raised $128 million to help offset the cuts. Community colleges can increase tuition by 5 percent, which would raise $34 million."(Ibid.)

Raising tuition above the rate of inflation is unacceptable in a time in which it is becoming harder and harder for working and middle class people to attend college (see an earlier post on this blog, "College in WA and across the US becoming unaffordable"). Costs for attending college have skyrocketed in recent years, keeping higher education out of reach for many lower-income people. Laying off faculty and staff will exacerbate already climbing unemployment in the state. Also, if laid-off workers are expected to enter community colleges for retraining, why are their budgets being reduced instead of increased?

"Natural resources: $35.8 million

"The proposed cuts include closing 13 of Washington's 121 state parks, saving $5.2 million, and shuttering some fish hatcheries, saving $6.6 million." (Ibid.)

Closing state parks will not only reduce the quality of life of people who spend their recreation time in the outdoors, it will result in lost jobs for park rangers and staff. Here's a comment from a woman responding to another person on this Seattle Times article:

"'OPEN YOUR EYES== this is all on paper NO real cuts.' Hey Mr. Nice Guy, tell that to the dozen or so Park Rangers who were told today that they will be laid off at the end of January, including my husband. Or the staff at the 13 state parks that are closing and are either losing their jobs or forced to move to other parks."

These budget cuts are affecting working people in real ways already. Workers like park rangers rely on state funding for good paying jobs that can support families. We must not let our quality of life be slashed to ribbons while the banks on Wall Street and the rich investors and corporations get bailed out when they are in trouble. 40 out of 50 states need significant amounts of money to continue providing jobs, services, and education to their constituents. The federal government has the money; we must demand it.

Related Articles:

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Washington's deficit not that bad?

By Evan Rohar

Speaker Chopp seems to be out of touch with what working people and students need. He doesn't think the budget deficit that is already causing the government to cut health care, workers' hours, and education is really that much of a problem. From the Seattle Times:

"House Speaker Frank Chopp said Washington's projected deficit may not be as bad as it looks.

"Chopp, a Seattle Democrat, was in the Tri-Cities Friday for a forum with the Columbia Basin Badger Club, a local group that grills politicians and newsmakers on political issues without taking sides.

"Several club members from the audience of about 75 asked Chopp about the state budget, which officials estimated in November would face a $5.1 billion shortfall in the upcoming biennium.

"But Chopp said the doom-and-gloom prophecies include estimates for $1 billion in spending on new programs, which seems unlikely given the current revenue picture.

"'In fact, we won't do that now,' he said.

"Some programs — such as all-day kindergarten — will have to wait until the economy turns around, he said." ("Chopp: Washington's deficit not that bad," 12/14/08)

New programs on the chopping block include increases to health care for children among many other badly needed services.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

One-dimensional stimulus

By Evan Rohar

Following are excerpts from two articles published in The Enterprise Newspapers in two days that illustrate the ineffectiveness of a one-dimensional economic stimulus plan:

"From Washington, D.C., and from Olympia, the refrain is the increasingly same: This recession demands a job-creating stimulus package.

"From Edmonds, the response has been quick: If you have money, we have ways to spend it. . .

"Sidewalks, walking trails, lighting improvements on downtown Edmonds' Main Street and more mundane projects are all included in the city's 11 project, $9.2 million 'stimulus package' wish list . . .

"All told, the city's projects would create a total of 116 full-time equivalent jobs, officials estimate." ("Edmonds' stimulus wish list $9.2 million long," 12/10/08)

"The [Edmonds school] district received almost $9 million in I-728 money last year, which funded about 78 full-time teachers. Mostly it goes to reducing class size, and the rest goes to teacher professional development and extended learning." ("Public school funding picture bleak," 12/11/08)

This is the problem with a one-dimensional economic stimulus program. If funding is taken away from I-728, 78 teachers will lose their jobs. Even if Edmonds gets everything on its bailout wish list (an unlikely prospect by the tone of the first article), it will create only 38 net jobs after subtracting the lost teaching positions.

An approach which pinpoints only certain ailing sectors of the economy will not work in a recession of this magnitude, especially when workers already have a very hard time finding living-wage work. From the Seattle PI:

"Nearly 80 percent of job openings in Washington last year paid less than a living wage for a single parent with two children. And every opening that did offer a living wage for that type of family drew an average of 10 job seekers.

"Overall, the percentage of job openings paying less than a livable wage for different household compositions remained virtually unchanged in 2007 from 2006, according to an annual study on the gap between what families earn and what they need to get by.

"Because the study does not reflect the economic trends of 2008, 'in all likelihood, the numbers are an underestimate, so the picture is even more bleak,' study author Gerald Smith said Tuesday." ("New jobs offer less than living wage," 12/9/08)

Workers' real weekly earnings have been declining since the mid-1970s. We need a diverse array of living-wage jobs in order to boost the living conditions of workers in this country.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

CPJ Article: Unite against the budget cuts or we will fail

We're in the current issue of the Cooper Point Journal. The article this time emphasizes the need for unity. Here it is:

We will unite against the budget cuts, or we will fail

By Benjamin Gallup and Evan Rohar

Every sector of spending in Washington State will be under attack during the coming legislative session. The budget deficit for 2009-10 will almost certainly reach $6 billion, while some say it could be as high as $8 or $9 billion. Legislators are now discussing a 23 percent cut to the higher education budget as part of their efforts to eliminate the deficit. Other large items on the long list of cuts are health care, social services, and primary education.

In the coming months, legislators will use “fiscal responsibility” as a rationale for cutting spending to programs that students and workers need most in a recession. Yet economists have said recently that fiscal restraint is likely to make our economic woes worse. The state needs immediate aid from the federal government to continue vital services as well as a progressive tax code which taxes corporations and the wealthy to provide a consistent and predictable source of revenue. This is, in fact, the “fiscally responsible” course. Our elected officials have not yet put forward an acceptable solution to this budget crisis, so we must organize and do it ourselves.

Given the task ahead, students, faculty, state workers, and indeed all citizens of this state must unite against the looming threat to our quality of life. We must build a state-wide coalition based on our common interests. This coalition will need to embrace a variety of tactics to accomplish the goal of full funding for all state programs.

Realizing the interconnectedness of each vulnerable program is the key to creating and maintaining a coalition of all the parties with a stake in this fight: students, faculty, and staff; state workers; and those dependent upon state social and health services. Perhaps most importantly, we must remember how the decisions made in the coming months will effect an already ailing economy, and therefore every person living in this State.

Last week, Governor Gregoire asked for a minimum $600 million from the federal government for infrastructure projects. At the same time, she sought a $600 million budget cut to higher education (which has since been revised upwards to $690 million). Addressing joblessness through a federal stimulus in one sector of the economy while laying off state workers in another makes little sense. We need a holistic approach to this economic crisis, not an injection of funds into one part of our ailing system while others are crippled. The government should not force faculty, staff, and students out of higher education just to seek the infrastructure jobs it is creating to stimulate the economy. Yet we as students cannot say to a laid-off construction worker who would benefit from a state infrastructure stimulus, “Our education is more important than your ability to find living-wage work.” Similarly, the government should not present the construction worker with two bad options: a good education for her child or a living-wage job.

We face a long struggle which could take us until the end of June and the deadline for a new state budget. We must steel ourselves and square our shoulders to the task ahead. Above all we must have faith in our collective ability to make a difference through organizing and mass action, as did those in the 20th century's civil rights, anti-war, and labor movements. Along the way, the governor and lawmakers will make concessions to groups within our coalition. We must build the strongest bonds of solidarity so that when one group gets what it wants, it does not just give up the fight for full funding of all our distinct, yet interconnected, needs.

In this economic climate, tuition hikes and layoffs of state workers should be out of the question. So, too, should a reduction in services to a growing number of people who need them. The federal government gives trillions of dollars in bailouts to banks and rich investors. Students and workers must unite to demand that the federal government fund our needs.

Task Force on K-12 ed recommends, but no one's listening

By Evan Rohar

The Basic Education Finance Task Force has come out with a list of recommendations for Washington State's K-12 education system. They make some excellent suggestions on how to improve the quality and equity of Washington's schools ("Recommendations of the Basic Education Task Force," Seattle Times, 12/10/08). The only problem is the price tag: $2-3 billion. From the Seattle Times:

"[Task force chairman] Dan Grimm, a former state legislator from Puyallup as well as a two-term state treasurer, said Thursday that he was inspired by a phone call and letter from Gov. Christine Gregoire to propose an extension of the sales tax to services. That would make things like doctor visits and financial advice subject to the state sales tax.

"On Tuesday, the task force voted to approve a proposal that asks for more state money to pay for things like a longer high-school day, smaller classes in the younger grades and regionally adjusted pay for teachers. . .

"Task-force members are not responsible for solving the state's financial crisis but the state will be unable to pay for the group's proposals with expected state revenue, the governor wrote to Grimm, who chairs the Basic Education Finance Task Force.

"'Task Force members must provide recommendations on how the state can fund their funding-level recommendations,' Gregoire wrote.

"When the group was formed by the Legislature in 2007, it was looking forward to years of plenty, Grimm said. But things changed and the task force did not change along with the economy, he said." ("Task force suggests sales-tax expansion," 12/12/08)

And why should a task force to improve education change with the economy? In times of plenty or times of trouble, is the need for a quality education, especially for children, not constant? Young people need a future whether the Dow is up or down. A tax on doctor's visits and other services is not the answer, however. Nor would voters who are already facing stagnant wages and layoffs pass a referendum to expand the sales tax pass . If state taxes are to be increased, they should fall on wealthy and hugely profitable corporations like Weyerhaeuser, Boeing, and Microsoft.

Furthermore, we need a federal government that is committed to expanding funding for education and other necessary services. That means an immediate injection of federal dollars into state coffers across the nation to bolster funding for education (k-12 and higher), health care, and services such as home care for the elderly. There seems to be a vacuum of leadership on these issues; we must fill that vacuum with our ideas and organization.

Editorial in the Seattle Times: Don't engage in deficit spending

By Evan Rohar

In an editorial published on December 10th, the Seattle Times stated that, though it is legal for the state to engage in deficit spending, it is not a good idea. It is worth quoting a large part of the article:

"Borrowing to build a university hall is like borrowing to buy a house. Borrowing to pay salaries of state workers is like taking out a mortgage to buy groceries.

"The state has, in fact, engaged in deficit spending under other names. It was in 2003, at the bottom of the last recession, when the state started getting lawsuit-settlement money from tobacco companies. To balance the budget, the state sold $450 million of tobacco-revenue bonds. Legislators called it 'selling the tobacco money.'

"They didn't call it deficit spending, but that's what it was. It was different only in that it was pledging future tobacco money, not future general-fund money.

"In 2005, which wasn't a recession year, the Legislature did what was essentially deficit spending: It skipped the scheduled $325 million payment into state employee pension funds. That was also borrowing against the future, and we can remember former-Rep. Helen Sommers, the Democrats' guardian of financial probity, denouncing it. Such a thing hadn't been done in 40 years, she said.

"Washington already borrows billions for capital projects such as roads, ferries and university buildings. These are expensive assets that last many years, and borrowing spreads the cost over the generations.

"Now, delaying the $443 million payment due in 2009 seems almost normal. We have suggested it ourselves.

"And so the restraints fall away. What is left? The belief that it is illegal, unconstitutional and just plain wrong for the state to meet current expenses by borrowing.

Now our reporter has smoked out the unfortunate fact that it's not illegal or unconstitutional. But it's still wrong. Don't do it." ("Even if a deficit budget is legal in Washington state, it's still a bad idea")

The Seattle Times happens to be right on many points. However, they offer no alternative to deficit spending other than one that is completely unacceptable: cut, cut, cut. In a period when the State's revenue could remain depressed for years to come, we must ask ourselves what our priorities are. Will we provide only infrastructure jobs at the expense of education, effectively selling off the future to subsidize the present? We need more federal money for schools and jobs, not one or the other. That money must come from somewhere; a good start would be the enormous military and prison budgets, ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the "war on drugs." Maybe the states should get some of the $700 billion allotted for handouts to the Wall Street firms and people who caused this economic crisis. In any case, state governments across the nation are in need of money to continue providing services and living-wage jobs. They need federal funds immediately. It has been left up to us by our complacent legislators and bureaucrats to put forward a solution that actually works, now and into the future.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

History professor Op-ed on Budget Cuts

By Evan Rohar

Sarah Laslett from Evergreen's Labor Education and Research Center sent out an op-ed article published in the Seattle Times on tesccrier. Its author, James N. Gregory, is a professor of history and director of the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies at the University of Washington. It is an excellent article outlining the argument against budget cuts during this severe recession. Here's an excerpt and link to this important article:

"When the private sector stalls, government needs to step in. It needs to spend money and increase employment in ways that might seem reckless in normal times. They talked about big public-works projects in 1931 and they passed an income tax to pay for it. But Gov. Roland Hartley vetoed both.

"The governor said he needed to follow the law, enforce a balanced budget and protect taxpayers. As a result, state spending declined in 1931. Seattle officials followed suit, laying off city workers instead of expanding employment.

"Gov. Christine Gregoire and the Legislature are on track to repeat the mistakes of 1931. Committed to balancing the state budget as required by current law, the governor has already ordered state agencies to cut more than $590 million and is proposing to slash another $5 billion to $6 billion in the next budget cycle.

"That will destroy as many as 20,000 jobs, adding to the state's escalating unemployment problem. It will mean drastic cutbacks in health and social services just when they are most needed. It will mean that college applicants will be turned away, hurting young people and further burdening the job market. It will damage, perhaps permanently, our universities and other institutions vital to the future of Washington. This is not what we need at this perilous juncture." ("As Olympia wrestles with a budget crisis, can it avoid the mistakes of 1931?" 12/5/08)

Better campuses, fewer students and lower quality education?

By Evan Rohar

It is interesting the things university presidents focus on when they are faced with a potential 23% cut to their budgets and have the opportunity to meet with the governor. Here are some excerpts from a Seattle PI article on a meeting Gov. Gregoire had with "business and education leaders" on how to stimulate the state's economy:

"Transportation projects are likely to make up a big part of the stimulus plan, which Gregoire said she'll announce in January. And the state's universities -- maybe most notably the UW -- plan to aggressively lobby the state to fund a list of campus building projects using that same line of reasoning.

"At the end of the two-hour meeting, members of the round table said maintaining an educated work force also emerged as a top priority. The state's public universities and community colleges have been told to prepare for deep cuts -- possibly as high as 20 percent of their current state funding.

"UW President Mark Emmert and Washington State University President Elson Floyd were at Monday's meeting. Afterward, they said both universities are poised to start new campus construction projects in the next few months." ("Governor vows push of big stimulus plan," 12/8/08)

If the governor and legislators cut the higher education budget by 23 percent (the new number the legislature is floating), will improved or new buildings on campuses really matter? If "maintaining an educated workforce emerged as a top priority," why is the only investment being proposed in the construction part of education? Furthermore, leaders from primary education were conspicuously absent from the meeting. If people don't have good primary educations, it follows that they will have trouble succeeding in college.

Construction jobs are important, but so is education (for the future as well as providing jobs in the present). We need both.

Related articles:

Monday, December 8, 2008

State isn't required to balance budget

By Evan Rohar

In an odd turn of events, The Seattle Times, obliterating long-held dogma in Washington's politics, recently uncovered that legislators were misinformed or untruthful in their assertions that the state's constitution requires that they pass a balanced budget.

"It's long been accepted gospel by many here: The state must balance its budget and can't borrow money to cover shortfalls like the one lawmakers now face.

"'My brochure for my race said that unlike the federal government we have to balance our budget,' said House Majority Leader Lynn Kessler, D-Hoquiam. 'I seriously believed that.'

"In fact, it's a myth.

"There's no legal barrier that prevents the state from going into deficit spending, according to legislative staff members and the governor's budget office.

"In other words, the state could borrow money long term to help fill a gaping hole in the 2009-11 state budget that the governor says could reach nearly $6 billion. The current two-year budget totals $33.6 billion." ("State isn't required to balance budget, but it's still the goal," 12/8/08)

This could potentially change the tone of the debate during the legislative session. Deficit spending on the state level, however, is a dangerous road to travel. If the state balances the budget with debt, the same budget items legislators are trying to slash this year will be on the chopping block in 2011. We need a long-term solution to this crisis so we have a future as well as short term solutions to minimize suffering in the present. The state needs immediate aid from the federal government to continue vital services as well as a progressive tax code which taxes corporations and the wealthy to provide a consistent and predictable source of revenue.

Legislative goals do not include higher ed

By Evan Rohar

From a Seattle PI article published on their website yesterday:
"Rep. Jim McDermott thinks the time is ripe to finally provide affordable health care coverage for all Americans.
"Sen. Patty Murray is looking to win her long fight to expand access to Veterans Affairs programs.
"Rep. Jay Inslee senses an opportunity to boost renewable energy initiatives and cut the nation's reliance on imported oil.
"[Rep. Norm Dicks says] Environmental initiatives in general should fare better under Obama,...specifically mentioning spending for a Puget Sound cleanup and for national parks.
"Maria Cantwell...anticipates welcome changes in White House policies on health care and energy. Specific measures she's optimistic about are legislation to curtail price manipulation in the oil market, and reform of programs helping workers adversely affected by foreign trade -- issues she has addressed previously.
"Rep. Rick Larsen, whose House district runs from Monroe to the Canadian border, sees better times ahead for issues he's worked on as a member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee." ("State's congressional leaders outline legislative goals," 12/7/08)

These are all commendable goals. However, as has been pointed out in previous entries on this blog, higher education (as well as primary educaton) has been consistently left out of conversations related to the coming legislative session, nationally as well as on the state level. In fact, the only time legislators and the governor seem to mention education at all is when they are discussing budget cuts. That being said, we must not fall into the trap of demanding funding for higher education at the expense of other programs. This sort of special-interest approach will divide students, faculty, staff, and all state workers as well as people who rely on funding for social and health services, isolating our efforts and turning one against another. Unity is the key to winning the struggle against budget cuts. We must put forward a message which will bring people together in solidarity with one another: No tuition hikes, no layoffs, no cuts to vital state services!

Friday, December 5, 2008

ECFF in the Cooper Point Journal

Our article made it into the Cooper Point Journal, page 7. Our visit to the Geoduck Student Union meeting made it on the front page. Check it out.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

College in WA and across the US becoming unaffordable

By Evan Rohar

The New York Times published an article yesterday entitled "College May Become Unaffordable for Most in U.S." It detailed a bleak report by the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education and quickly become the most emailed article on the New York Times website. The report states that net costs for college (tuition + fees + room & board - financial aid) as a percentage of family income have risen dramatically over the past decade. Furthermore,

"The share of income required to pay for college, even with financial aid, has been growing especially fast for lower-income families, the report found.

"Among the poorest families — those with incomes in the lowest 20 percent — the net cost of a year at a public university was 55 percent of median income, up from 39 percent in 1999-2000. At community colleges, long seen as a safety net, that cost was 49 percent of the poorest families’ median income last year, up from 40 percent in 1999-2000." (12/3/08)

Enrollment in college has continued to grow, but this is only because families and students have been taking on an enormous amount of debt. With the loan market continuing to deteriorate and an unwillingness by the legislators to even consider giving direct federal loans, college will become inaccessible to many if nothing is done. Workers 25-34 years old are already less-educated than older workers.

The situation in Washington State is no better than the national picture. The Seattle Times wrote yesterday that "poor and working-class families in Washington must spend 36 percent of their income, in addition to financial aid, to pay for tuition at a two-year college" ("Study says Washington colleges flunk affordability", 12/3/08). It is becoming more and more clear that our state's budget must not be balanced through cuts to education, services, and health care.

"Stimulus" and slashes to health care

By Evan Rohar

The Seattle Times is reporting that the Governor is now preparing her budget for a nearly $6 billion deficit:

"In Washington state, Gregoire said, 'We're looking at $5.8 billion in cuts' over the next 2 ½ years, unless economic conditions change."

She also outlined what kind of aid she would like to see from the federal government:

"Asked how much money she would like to see the state receive as part of the proposed federal stimulus package, Gregoire said she hopes for 'something short of $1 billion' for infrastructure projects, Medicaid reimbursement and other assistance. ("Gregoire says state needs $600 million economic stimulus," 12/2/08)

"She hopes for 'something short of $1 billion.'" We need $5.8 billion to continue vital services in this state. Why is she only hoping for "something short of a billion?" Why in this economically troubled period are our "leaders" hoping for a pittance when they could fight for so much more? Assuming Gregoire gets the minimum of what she is asking for, $600 million, that would still leave $5.2 billion is cuts to be made to education and social services. Even the Seattle Times acknowledges, "The recession and the accompanying increase in joblessness have translated into higher health-care costs for the poor, greater use of food stamps and added strain on welfare programs." It seems that the governor is out of touch with the situation for students and workers in this economy. She still has mentioned nothing about any kind of federal aid to education in this State.

Health care is already being slashed. Washington's Basic Health Plan, in which people "pay a fee based on how much they earn" is set to decrease its enrollment by 7700 by July. "The director, Steve Hill, told The Olympian it will limit enrollments. For every two people who drop off the plan, the state will add only one." (Seattle Times, "Budget ax falling on Washington Basic Health Plan," 12/3/08). This is no time to be cutting services to those who need it most. We need a real solution to this budget crisis that does not hurt working people and students.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

States seek aid from congressional democrats

By Evan Rohar

Yesterday in the New York Times:

"House Democrats said Monday that they would try to pass an economic recovery bill costing $400 billion to $500 billion next month as governors pressed Congress for money to build roads and bridges, provide health care to low-income people and develop alternative sources of energy." ("Democrats in House Plan a Package of Up to $500 Billion to Help State," 12/01/08)

Today, governors from forty states met with President-elect Obama to outline what they need from the federal government. From the Seattle PI website:

"The governors want Obama to provide at least $40 billion to help pay for health care for the poor and disabled and even more for infrastructure projects like road and bridge repair.

"National Governors Association Chairman Ed Rendell, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, said the governors are also pressing for perhaps $136 billion in infrastructure projects like road and bridge repairs in the legislation, which Democrats hope to have ready for Obama's signature as soon as he takes office on Jan. 20." ("Obama seeks to assure nervous governors on economy," 12/02/08)
  • Roads and bridges - Excellent
  • Healthcare for low-income folks - Superb
  • Alternative sources of energy - Who could argue?

There is one element of states' budgets that is conspicuously absent from articles that cover this economic recovery program: education. These talks are, of course, preliminary, but the lack of any discussion about funding education is quite distressing. Furthermore, any bill with this price tag is sure to meet with fierce resistance from house Republicans, and this democratic congress's record on pushing legislation through is very weak.

This development outlines the need for students, staff, and faculty to organize in order to make our voices heard. However, we must put forward a program ensuring that funding education does not detract from programs that provide good jobs, medical care, and social programs.

Related Articles

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Gregoire proposes huge State budget cuts

By Evan Rohar

Gregoire has put out an initial plan for making the cuts necessary to balance the State's budget. The Seattle Times published an article today on her plans. Here are two excerpts:

"The governor's office, along with agency staff, reviewed state programs and ranked them by priority. About 200 state programs and services, worth about $2.7 billion, top their list for cutting or eliminating entirely to help close a gaping hole in the state budget."

"On the chopping block: more than $900 million over two years that funds an initiative approved by voters to reduce class sizes; $342 million that aids school districts with small property-tax bases, and about $20 million that pays for gifted-student programs." (Seattle Times, "Gregoire looking at massive state budget cuts," 11/30/08)

Also on the chopping block is $404 million for higher education.

There are two things especially to note about this initial proposal. First of all, it is about half or perhaps less than half of what will need to be cut to balance the budget (Gregoire admits that the budget deficit may reach $6 billion in this deteriorating economy). This first shot at identifying programs to be cut is meant to soften the blow of what truly lies ahead: a much more aggressive reduction of spending. The $404 million for education will almost certainly grow back to the $600 million cut that educators have been told to prepare for. Cuts to cost of living pay increases for State workers will almost certainly be part of the plan (a modest 2% per year which at this point does not even cover inflation).

The other very interesting point to note is that this plan looks very similar to the Seattle Times' plan laid out in their editorial published on Nov. 23rd (article and analysis in a post below). Going right down the list, you have a $1.3 billion from public schools (which is actually $400 million more than the Times' proposal), $572.5 million from social services (cutting health care for the children, the poor, and the elderly), and the $404 million from higher ed. The Seattle Times is the principle newspaper for putting forward the opinions and program of big business in Washington State. Gregoire still has not set a course that would avoid hurting students and working people. Her request of $100+ million fromt the federal government is still just a drop in the bucket compared to the massive deficit this State will run. We have to organize to put our program forward, because we don't have a newspaper, staff writers, or a governor to do it for us.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Tabling in the CAB

By ECFF

Come to the CAB during lunch hours (11am until 1 or 2pm) starting Monday December 1st through the 8th for tabling (excluding Saturday and Sunday). We will be handing out fliers, circulating our petition, and talking with people to raise awareness about the proposed higher ed budget cuts, the need to organize against them, and our meeting toward that end (December 10th in SEM2 A1105 from 4-6). We have to offer an alternative to higher tuition and a lower quality (or no) education. Everyone who is able should get involved. Bring signs or whatever else you can think of to grab attention. The biggest problem right now is letting people know about this issue and inviting them to join in our struggle against it. See you in the CAB.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Community colleges must cut 6,000 students

By ECFF

"Community colleges would need to shed at least 6,000 students and end a long tradition of opening the doors to everyone, leaders say. And the University of Washington would need to abandon its plans to double the number of students at its branch campuses in Tacoma and Bothell."

Further articles from the Seattle Times on cuts to higher education:

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008408803_uwcuts19m.html

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008425188_highered23m0.html

First Meeting of Evergreen Commitee for Full Funding




The first meeting
of the Evergreen Committee for Full Funding will be Wednesday the 10th of December in SEM 2 A1105 from 4 to 6 PM. All are encouraged and welcome to come!




The Seattle Times - Legislature, governor must find $5 billion in spending cuts without raising taxes

By Evan Rohar

The Seattle Times on Sunday called for what amounts to an all-out attack on students and state workers. Here's the article, with analysis below:

"Five billion dollars. The state has to cut that amount of projected spending to balance its budget from mid-2009 to mid-2011. It can be done — with enormous difficulty.
The $5.1 billion gap is a projection only, and could change. Between now and March, when the state budget is finalized, it probably will widen. It is not likely to shrink.
The gap might be filled with new taxes, but it would be foolhardy to lay on big new taxes during an economic crisis. Every business is trying to manage its way out, conserving its cash. Gov. Christine Gregoire pledged she would manage the state's finances without any tax increase, and she should stick to that.
After discussions with budget people in both political parties, we have some ideas for reaching $5 billion. The ideas are rough ones — with neither the Republican or Democratic name on them — and we are not sure we like our name on all of them, either. But this list is a place to begin.
• $926 million — Cancel the Initiative 728 money, or most of it. Officially this is for class-size reduction in the public schools, but the schools have folded it into everyday operations. Cutting I-728 money was done in 2003, when the budget was in a crisis, and has to be done again. That is the danger of budgeting by initiative.
• $887 million — Don't fund increases in pay and benefits for government employees, including at state-funded schools and colleges. Simply put, it's a crisis. Nobody on the state tab can expect a raise. This is unavoidable.
• $700 million — Tap the state's rainy-day fund. "I don't know that it rains any harder than this," says the governor's budget director, Victor Moore.
• $600 million — Cut seats in state universities and community colleges. Cut some tuition waivers. Offset some cuts with increased tuition.
• $440 million — Skip the payment to state employee pension funds, which was done in 2003. This will have to be made up later. A cut does not affect anyone's benefits.
• $150 million — Freeze enrollment in the Basic Health Plan, the state's health-insurance plan for the not-quite-poor.
• $100 million Cut General Assistance-Unemployable, a welfare program most states don't have, by time-limiting the program and forcing clients onto Supplemental Security Income, which is federal.
• $100 million — Extend the partial state hiring freeze past June 30, 2009.
• $82 million — End sales-tax-mitigation payments to cities.
• $70 million — Skip a contribution to the Life Sciences Discovery Fund.
• $52 million — Take away the three math and science learning-improvement days — nonteaching days — for high-school teachers, and two similar days for elementary teachers.
• $45 million — Require that children with household incomes under 200 percent of the poverty level now in the Basic Health Plan enroll in Medicaid instead, because half of Medicaid is paid with federal dollars.
• $28 millionRepeal Initiative 1029, which requires extra training for in-home-care workers.
• $20 million — Don't raise the cutoff on the state Children's Health Insurance Program from 250 percent of poverty to 300 percent as previously planned.
• $12 million — Cut Community, Trade and Economic Development money to "coordinate government efforts to improve the effectiveness of economic investments."
That list totals more than $4 billion. There are many other ideas, some of which could offset proposals that are unacceptable.
The state could raise the minimum loss for felony theft, so that more thieves would go to county jail than to state prison. It could repeal the "three strikes" law and parole some prisoners convicted under that law. It could divert tax sources, like lottery money, that now go into the capital budget back into the general fund. It could do some contracting out. Etc. Etc.
The Legislature will have a painful time to get to $5 billion. But with a close look at many small things, which we have not done here, it can be done.
Taxpaying families and employers are having to live within their means and their government must do the same.

The $5 Billion Threat to Students and Workers

By Benjamin Gallup and Evan Rohar

Due to plunging tax revenue because of the weak economic situation, Washington State will run a budget deficit of $5 billion over the next two years. Legislators are exploring all possibilities for balancing the budget, including a $600 million (20 percent) cut to higher education. A budget cut of this magnitude would have dire consequences for students and campus workers (including faculty, staff, and maintenance workers). Meanwhile, the legislators in Washington, D.C. find $3 trillion for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and more than $1 trillion to bail out rich investors.

The students of this campus and at public universities across the State cannot afford to take the cost of this $600 million on our backs. Nor should we settle for larger class sizes and fewer courses of study. We are already paying far more for our education than our parents' generation. Public grants for higher education have declined in value over the past 20 years. In 1987-88 the Pell Grant covered a student's expenses for half the school year. In 2007 that number declined to one-third, with expensive private loans taking up the slack. If the budget-slashing goes forward, tuition hikes and faculty lay-offs will make higher education even less accessible.

And yet while students will surely be hurt by the slashed higher education budget, we will not be the only ones under attack in the coming period. Governor Gregoire is proposing massive cuts to State programs across the board, which will put people dependent on those programs into dire straits. It is exactly during a recession that working families need these programs. Furthermore, State workers everywhere will face attacks on their wages, pensions, and health care.

No alternative has been offered by the Governor or our legislators to this dilemma. They have never once raised the prospect of abolishing the regressive sales tax in favor of a progressive income tax that targets the wealthy and big business to boost revenue. Nor have they proposed approaching the federal government for aid to schools. Therefore, we must do it ourselves.

We must respond quickly. Evergreen Socialist Alternative is calling for an organizing committee to be formed to plan a response to this crisis. The Evergreen Committee for Full Funding will meet on Wednesday, December 10 in SEMII A1105 at 4:00pm. We are trying to link up all students, faculty, staff, and workers who will be affected by these cuts, and encourage everyone to come be part of the discussion and decision making process. We are proposing various activities including a march on the capitol for some time in January or early February, after the legislature convenes. We must organize on all public school campuses and all State work sites to make the largest possible impact. Some will say that the government cannot afford to sustain current levels of spending, yet there is always enough money for corporate bailouts and war. The money is there if the political will is there, and we can create the political will if we organize.

Students and workers have already been forced over the last 30 years to cut back on their quality of life because of the offensive on unions and students carried out by big business. We must not let them put the weight of this economic downturn on our shoulders. Instead, we will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with our teachers, staff, and building maintenance workers to defend against the imminent attacks on our quality of life in the classroom and on the job. We need a movement to fight for our right to a good education and living-wage jobs based on a platform of:

No program cuts,

No layoffs,

No tuition increases, and

No attacks on wages and benefits of state workers:

To be paid for by federal aid and taxes on the wealthy.

Contact EvergreenCFF@gmail.com to get involved or come to our meeting in SemII A1105, Wednesday, December 10 at 4:00pm.

State proposes massive cuts for education - build a campaign to stop the cuts!

By ECFF

With the strain of a recession bearing down upon students and workers alike, Washington state has recently declared that it will cut up to 5 billion dollars from the state budget. Over $600 million - 20 percent - will be cut for higher education. This means massive layoffs for teachers and college workers, higher tuition and book prices, reduced student services and choice of classes, and more restrictive entry requirements for both community and four-year colleges.

Not enough money?

While federal and local officials claim that these cutbacks are the result of a state budget shortfall, they have no trouble finding billions of dollars for the disastrous occupation of Iraq or the corporate bailout of Wall Street. The proposed cut of $600 million is equal to 20% of our state higher education budget, but equals only 0.09% of the recent bailout for Wall Street.

These cuts cannot stand. We need to organize a campaign with the following demands:

-Stop the budget cuts
-No layoffs
-No cuts to classes or services
-No increase in tuition
-No to more restrictions on admission requirements
-Hands off open enrollment for community colleges
-No attacks on wages, benefits or working conditions for employees

How can we fight back?

If students, teachers, and staff are firmly united, organized, and are mobilizing to win public support, these cuts can be defeated. That’s why it is important to absolutely reject the argument that, “There isn’t enough money." The second we accept this logic, the politicians will begin dividing students against faculty, faculty against administrators, and staff against teachers -- for crumbs. United we win, divided we beg.

We demand that our federal government fully fund quality education. Any state budget shortfall should be made up through taxes on the wealthy and big corporations, not cuts in our education. We can't afford cuts, but the rich can afford to pay more taxes.

Join us in building a campaign to mobilize enormous pressure on the politicians in Olympia. A successful campaign must rely on our power in numbers, not on the good will of politicians or administrators. Ultimately, defeating these cuts will require the massive united action of students, staff, and teachers, with demonstrations, rallies, walkouts and strikes.

Get Involved:

evergreencff@gmail.com