Gov. Rick Scott has done an abrupt turnaround on education spending, proposing a $100 increase per student despite dealing with a $2 billion budget shortfall.
That is great news for the Manatee County School District, which was gearing up to feel the fiscal vise again. But the budget needs to get through the Legislature, where education spending may not increase.
The district is projecting a 1,000-student increase in enrollment. Money from the state follows students, so theoretically, that increased cost is covered in operating expenses. That will depend on the spring legislative session outcome.
If more cuts are needed, which seems likely, much of the budget debate for the next school year will come down to salaries and focus on teacher salaries. This has to be the case, because personnel is where most of the district’s money is spent.
But, although the financial picture is foggy, and it will be another slog for School Board members, the administration and the teachers union, that does not mean it needs to be bleak for students.
Even if some cuts happen — which seems likely — students still have an array of classes, teachers, extracurricular activities, food and so on. In fact, the typical Manatee student has far more resources available than any previous generation. Education should still happen unabated.
Unfortunately, the district recently got the typical us-versus-them, good-guy-bad-guy report from Jim Hamilton, of Mixon and Associates. (This is the same group currently analyzing the Sarasota County School District’s finances and one of the education establishment’s ultimate insiders.)
Hamilton told the School Board that in Tallahassee, “There’s not a lot of concern about whether teachers get paid.”
Whether he was pandering to his audience or just revealing his pro-establishment bias, the statement was flat wrong — seriously, politicians don’t care if teachers get paid? — and harmful to what Manatee schools need to do for students next year.
Because all of the finger-pointing and blame done between Tallahassee, individual districts and teachers unions does not educate one child. And that should be the focus of the School Board.
+ East County comeback
We thought it would be the case, and it appears to be: The Lakewood Ranch area is leading the two-county economic comeback with new houses, new stores and new offices.
As the East County Observer reported last week, out of 41 construction permits for more than $1 million pulled last year in Sarasota and Manatee counties, a full one-quarter of them are in the Ranch area.
Several new subdivisions are now under way along with a revival of retail and office construction in the University Parkway corridor.
This is good news for the region and great news for the Ranch area.
Currently 0 Responses
- May
20 Braden River Soccer Club Pre-Tryout Camp
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm - May
22 Lakewood Ranch Business Alliance May Morning Express Networking Social - SCF "How SCF Supports Local Business"
7:30 am - 9:00 am - May
26 Tribute to Heroes Parade - Main St LWR
5:00 pm - 9:00 pm - May
28 Braden River Soccer Club Try-outs
6:00 pm
-
Ranch rallies against cancer
05/15/13
East County residents will rally to fight cancer Saturday, May 18, as the American Cancer Society hosts its annual Lakewood Ranch Relay for Life event at the Lakewood Ranch YMCA. -
Barista pours on fun for daughters
05/15/13
State Road 70 Starbucks barista and East County resident Cyndee Vanderford showed her daughters the world of lattes and mochas for Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day April 25. -
Troop plants Freedom's courtyard
05/15/13
Girls in Girl Scouts Junior Troop 181, at Freedom Elementary School, recently earned their Bronze Award by researching and planting the back of the school’s courtyard.
