Teachers are often hailed as heroes during times of crisis. News reports praise the teachers who shielded our children in the face of the recent Oklahoma tornado or the Sandy Hook shooting, for example. By the next news cycle, however, the idea of teaching as a noble profession gets blown away faster than the school roof during that tornado. Without any concept of irony, many in the media cast teachers as "union thugs" holding children hostage for pay raises while blaming teachers' contracts for crashing the economy.
When
government has a chance to help fund education, that funding often comes at the
cost of teachers' dignity and value. The 2009 American Recovery Act (known as
the stimulus) was inaccurately labeled a failure or a giveaway to liberal
teacher unions instead of what it actually was--government action that saved
millions of jobs, many of them in education. When President Obama proposed the
American Jobs Act in 2011, it was criticized as "Stimulus II" and
blocked by Republicans who ignored the fact that the act would have saved
thousands more teachers from layoffs.
In
several states, most notably Wisconsin, Republican governors and state
legislators have attacked teachers' collective-bargaining rights, claiming to
be simply responding to budget shortfalls while conveniently ignoring the fact
that corporate tax giveaways often led to those budget problems. Their
priorities are clear: teachers are valued less than corporate campaign donors.
Here
in Northampton, we might easily blame the misguided scapegoatting of teachers
by faraway extremist Republicans and Fox News pundits who snarl and smirk
through fact-free accounts of teachers as overpaid and underworked.
Unfortunately, the attacks on education from outside our town have more impact
on us than we may think.
The
connections are clear. First, the wrong-headed fetish for budget cuts in
Washington affects everyone across the country. The last decade proved that
wealth doesn't "trickle down"--but budget cuts do. Less federal
funding to states means less state funding to towns, which means less funding
available for schools. Second, Republican tax cuts made the budgets even worse,
like demanding that your boss cut your pay even as your bills pile up. And
third, the economic crash at the end of the Bush administration led to even
less tax income for the government, further stressing everyone's budget.
Our
nation is a connected community, not a set of isolated islands. To extend Tip
O'Neill, all politics is just as national as local. The right-wing policies
embraced in other states affect us here in Northampton where vast majorities
would outvote those policies.
Northampton's
budget gap isn't the result of overspending, as Fox News might assert. The same
budget-slashing trends that affect Florida and Pennsylvania and Kansas and
Mississippi hit us as well. When Texas representatives vote for education cuts
and tax giveaways for the wealthy, the "Butterfly Effect" causes us
to suffer right along with the Texas teachers who get laid off.
Unlike
most Texans, however, we can do something about it. On June 25, we can vote yes
on the proposed budget override as a reasonable local response to the
unreasonable wave of right-wing national politics that have led to a decade of
strained local funding. The override will provide funding for a four-year plan
that will save the jobs of many Northampton teachers and school staff, those
professionals we know as heroes in more than just times of danger and disaster.
Their everyday heroics include connecting our children with music and art,
providing psychological support and learning enhancement, and helping our
community's young people realize their personal and intellectual potential.
The
funding would come from a modest increase in property taxes, an option that
places the burden primarily on those of us who can most afford it--myself
included. I believe what Oliver Wendell Holmes said: "Taxes are what we
pay for civilized society." I chose to own a home in Northampton because
this is a civilized place, and I can prioritize my own family budget to help
preserve the local civilization that makes Northampton a great place to live.
Unfortunately,
given the regressive and counterproductive Republican policies enacted across
the nation, no solution is perfect. But the override isn't a stopgap measure
like the self-inflicted crisis governing practiced by Congressional
Republicans. It's a responsible, long-term plan meant to avoid more crises in
the future.
One
of the most important aspects of this town is also one of the best qualities in
our national character: we value education. Unfortunately, in some parts of the
United States, extremist politicians who pay lips-service to the concept of
education have forgotten to value actual educators. Here in Northampton, we
have an opportunity to support education in concept and in reality. We can vote
yes on the override on June 25.
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