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POST UPDATED ON FEB. 24
On Feb. 7, Gov. Corbett delivered his annual budget address, indicating his funding priorities for 2012-13.
The Education Law Center's analysis of the education budget proposal indicates continued cuts to poor school districts and lack of a plan for funding Pennsylvania's public schools.
The analysis is attached below. A summary can be found at http://www.elc-pa.org/budget2012.html.
For the next several weeks, hearings will be held in the Capitol to review the Governor’s education budget. Members of the General Assembly will have the opportunity to ask both Budget Secretary Zogby and Education Secretary Tomalis detailed questions about the priorities outlined in the Governor’s budget. The legislature will use the hearings to gather information, before presenting their own budget proposals.
The Education Law Center is going to present legislators with a list of questions to ask the Corbett Administration officials during the budget hearings. The Law Center is encouraging parents, students, community members, business leaders, advocates, and organizers to submit their own questions they'd like legislators to ask.
Simply add a question (or two) in the Reply box below. (It requires a PA School Talk sign in, which takes a minute to complete, or can be done with an existing Facebook account.)
We will organize the questions by category and distribute them to legislators in the Capitol prior to the hearings.
Then watch the hearings live or follow the live blog from the hearings right here on PA School Talk to see which questions get answered – and what those answers are.
Here is the full list of budget appropriations hearings in the House and Senate.
What questions do you have about the state education budget for the next school year?
Some questions the Law Center would start with are:
Tags: Center, Corbett, Law, Pennsylvania, budget, education
Is the Common Cores Curriculum constitutional?
How are district's going to pay for the new text books and the teacher training on the new keystone exams related to common cores?
How does this budget allow for more children to be prepared to enter Kindergarten?
Permalink Reply by Brett Schaeffer on February 27, 2012 at 10:50am Excellent questions, Tyra.
Especially since many school districts use Accountability Block Grants to fund full-day kindergarten. Those block grants have been eliminated.
You can watch the hearings live right now: http://pcntv.com/watch-now/
© 2012 Created by Brett Schaeffer.
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