Saturday, March 12, 2011

The Corbett Budget Message Offers Moral Support To Financial Restaint (Updated)

Governor Tom Corbett did cut back on spending in his budget plan, rolling back the Rendell giveaway to public education including the universities.

He noted the savings that would occur if Pennsylvania's teachers were take a one year pay freeze (400 million dollars).

His message offered moral support to taxpayer activists fighting local tax and spend business as usual school boards across the state.

Corbett didn't go as far as Wisconsin's governor did, he's said Pennsylvania isn't Wisconsin and union leaders seem to agree he hasn't gone that far with his ideas.

But they are disappointed especially with ideas like having taxpayers pass judgement on any tax hikes over the inflation rate in Pennsylvania's school districts.

If the referendum legislation passes, it would be a step forward for taxpayers and backwards for the public education insiders ranging from the administration to the unions and school boards that support the agendas of one or both.

But many newspaper comment posters have rightly pointed out that reform of pay and benefits should start with Pennsylvania's legislators.

That's not happening right now.

If Corbett were to push for change in legislative pay and perks, that would be a good thing.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Senate Bill 1: A Long Way From Walker And Bound To Fail

Pennsylvania's Senate Bill 1 with its plan for school choice (demonized as "vouchers") for poor students in poor schools isn't going to be welcomed by the Pennsylvania State Education Association, but they certainly won't be howling like the Wisconsin Education Association union did over Governor Scott Walker's legislation.

It seems that Pennsylvania's Republican Governor Tom Corbett is living up to expectations of being a "moderate" (RINO) because he doesn't see Pennsylvania as needing the kind of pension or health benefit reform for Pennsylvania's public school employees that Wisconsin's governor is trying to achieve there.

Charter school operators provided Corbett with campaign gifts and it looks like this poiltical environment has created the legislation aimed at urban areas with poorly performing public schools.  Its here that the charter schools are springing up and will spring up in the future, especially with the financial support from SB 1.

The Senate Bill 1 argument will be made that poor children in poorly performing schools deserve a decent education but PSEA will quickly negate that argument with the notion that taxpayers money will be lost to public schools forcing up property taxes.

This argument will play well in the suburban and rural areas where grassroots anger is rising against annual property tax hikes.  It's these Tea Party friendly, more conservative areas that gave Corbett and other Republicans 70 to 80 percent support last year.

Yet its likely that many legislators from these areas will be bombarded with opposition to SB 1 and they may vote NO causing the bill to fail in the legislature.   Not only is SB 1 bound to lose, but Republicans will be bloodied by the higher tax argument of the teacher's union.

Corbett, along with SB1's leading supporters (Senators Jeff Piccola and Mike Folmer) should revise the legislation to offer school choice statewide and reframe the argument to appeal to the Republican Party's grassroots.

The new statewide school choice pitch goes like this.   Private schools spend less per student with more reasonable salaries and benefits for administration and teachers.    Private schools don't build extravagent buildings or have massive athletic facilies.  Shouldn't schools that spend money more wisely be rewarded with taxpayer dollars instead of those that waste money.

Republicans in Pennsylvania need to take the fight to the enemies of the conservative grassroots like the Pennsylvania State Education Association or the school choice fight is one that Governor Corbett and Senator's Piccola and Folmer are likely to lose.

Conservatives right now are cheering Governors like Scott Walker in Wisconsin and Chris Christie in New Jersey for drawing union wrath.   Governor Tom Corbett is giving conservatives nothing to cheer about and unless he does the Republican Party will end up paying the price in future elections.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Here We Go

Lets bring some excitement into the discussion of Pennsylvania politics and take on the business as usual Democrat and RINO politicians that populate Harrisburg and demand some real change.

The GrassrootsPA website removed comments last year to stop that lively debate that exposed the truth about the powers that be in Harrisburg.

The discussion needs to start again and it starts right here.