Nemo’s Lessons About The Economy
Sunday Cuppa

Will Children Be Casualties Of The Stimulus “Compromise”?

The stimulus kabuki continues. Will children be the losers in this publicly played out farce? Via CQ:

The single biggest spending cut to the original Senate plan comes out of a $79 billion state fiscal stabilization allocation that would help states avoid tax increases and cutbacks in education and other high priority services. The compromise trims that funding to $39 billion and sets up a conflict with the House-passed bill that allocates $79 billion….

The compromise would cut additional funding for Head Start and Early Head Start, programs to prepare children to succeed in school, from $2.1 billion to 1.05 billion. That’s half of the $2.1 billion in the House bill.

The Senate substitute eliminates $5.8 billion in the original measure that would have been spent on grants and contracts to prevent illness through health screenings, education, immunization, nutrition counseling, media campaigns and other activities. The House has set aside $3 billion for prevention and wellness.

Children don’t vote.  Which means that programs which benefit them far too often end up on the funding chopping block.  

So who will pushback on their behalf for the upcoming conference negotiations on this bill?

I know I will be. And I hope you will, too.  Why?  Because without a public push, the likelihood of any of this funding being restored is nil — and the most vulnerable members of our society will be shoved aside.  Again.  At a time when their need is increasingly desperate.  

Unacceptable.

Some ammunition for calls to your Senators and House members: 

– High demand for free/reduced-price lunch eats into school district’s budget.

Nearly 50 percent of students who attend Yulee Primary School rely on a getting a free or reduced-price lunch, and that number is growing rapidly, according to officials. Many school districts said they don’t expect to see that trend end any time soon. 

"It’s such an iffy world out there right now. We just have to maintain these programs for the parents to have the knowledge that their kids are going to get at least one good meal a day," said Nassau County food services director Allyn Graves….

For many school districts the demand for assistance has begun eating into the budget. Fresh fruit can no longer be offered on a daily basis because it’s too expensive. Also, food service jobs are being eliminated.

–  Schools face sharp rise in homeless students.

Schools, often the first safety net for struggling families, are emerging as a key anchor for homeless youths. In addition to their legally required free breakfasts and lunches, many schools also offer tutoring, give out backpacks and clothes, and connect families with community services. In Manassas a social worker has arranged for homeless high school students to go early to shower. 

–  Economy’s silent, heavy toll on children.

– Lest people think the homeless children problem is recent, it’s been growing since 2003.

– More children arriving at homeless shelters.

– Amid foreclosures, a rise in homeless students.

– Homeless numbers alarming.

– Homeless services hit hard.

– More Greenville families doubling up.

– The "w" word, re-engaged.

– Economy squeezing foster care system.

– Homeless camps strain environment.

– Department of Agriculture summer nutrition program to benefit children.

– Schools losing thousands of dollars in free breakfast/lunch funding.

– Feed students to help them learn.

Also, prior articles in this child poverty series:  making child poverty a priority;  mortgaging the nation’s future Part I and Part II; better childhood nutrition Part I and Part IIgive kids a head start; bringing poverty to the table Part I and Part IItrue compassion.

  Spotlight
79 Responses to "Will Children Be Casualties Of The Stimulus “Compromise”?"
Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:29 am 1

Thanks Christy, I’ll have some time this week to do this. Why don’t people realize that children are our future?


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:31 am 2
In response to Millineryman @ 1

That should be, why don’t some politicians realize that children are our future.


demi | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:34 am 3

In order to register a student in LA Unified, one must provide a utility bill that proves you live in the area. If a family doesn’t have a permanent residence, I’m wondering how they work that. Is it different in other cities/states?


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:38 am 4
In response to Millineryman @ 2

I wish I had an answer to that one.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:39 am 5
In response to demi @ 3

Most schools have some sort of internal policy on registration for homeless kids. In a lot of districts, it isn’t a common occurrence, but common enough through the years to have formulated some sort of policy that almost always involves working with local shelter supervisors and DHHS (or whatever other social agency might be working with the kids).


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:43 am 6

Arizona has reported increasing numbers of kids attending school who are homeless due to foreclosure and/or loss of parents’ jobs.

This compromise is being done to those who have no voice. Forget Hoovervilles, we are going to have Collinvilles around the country soon.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:45 am 7
In response to AZ Matt @ 6

CA has been having that issue for a while — take a peek at the homeless camps article I linked above.


PriscillaQOB | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:46 am 8

Christy, I will continue to fight. I am glad that your and the Pups are fighting too because sometimes it seems that no one has the backs of us teachers who spend much of our non-working time (and too much of our working time) fighting to get our kids the things they need.

Here in FL we were graced with the property tax refund constitutional amendment last year, sponsored by a Norquist-esque group called Florida Tax Watch. The neverending TV ads and the Republican governor himself repeatedly told us that education would be held harmless.

Ooops! they fooled us again! As soon as the state legislature saw how much the reduced tax revenue (do they need to come back to my primary class and learn basic addition and subtraction again?) and the tanking housing and tourism industries were going to hit the state budget, they took an axe to the education budget. FL already ranked near the bottom in per pupil spending, by the way, even though we are the 4th largest school district after NYC, CA, and TX.

The legislature met again in December and made even more cuts. And they told us to expect worse in July for the next fiscal year. The results? Children who are hungry, moving constantly or homeless, sick (dental problems are especially hard to get treated), and frightened all the time. Just in time to coincide with Jeb’s! huge jumps in meeting Adequate Yearly Progress under NCLB, which he wisely passed on to his successor.

For years he pulled a 3 card monte trick with lottery money, adding it to the education budget and trumpeting how much he was giving to education, while quietly subtracting the same amount from the general fund contributions to education. He knew his math!

My kids are suffering worse; they were suffering before under the Bush junta but the suffering is worse now by several degrees. Parents of poor children are stressed beyond their limits. Families are moving in with each other and moving every few months when they are evicted. Food is scarce. Medical care non-existent.

I hope the Senate compromisers are proud of themselves. Really proud. Nothing like bashing the hopes and dreams of small children in order to keep the shareholders and executives flush, eh?

Keep up the good fight! We so desperately need every one who is willing to stand up for those who are too small to stand for themselves.


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:47 am 9

demi | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:48 am 10
In response to Christy Hardin Smith @ 5

Thanks. It’s a relief to know that. I guess that’s one of the benefits of having a program like Family Promise (http://www.familypromise.org/). I’m working with some people to establish one of these programs in LA. It’s going to take a lot of work to put it in place and won’t happen over night, but the need isn’t going away tomorrow, so we will keep at it.


demi | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:50 am 11
In response to Millineryman @ 9

Thanks for the reminder, MM, and…dugg.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:51 am 12
In response to PriscillaQOB @ 8

It’s such a mess — and I’m so sorry for your kids and for the stress that you and fellow teachers have to deal with at this point. These kids are our future, and the sooner we pay attention to the long-term consequences of continued neglect, the better.


foothillsmike | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:56 am 13

Bush wanted to make Iraq and Afghanistan more like us. Who would have thought we would be the ones to have to change. Osama has won!


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:58 am 14
In response to Millineryman @ 9

Thanks for all the diggs, gang.


Hugh | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:59 am 15

OT The AP is saying that Kathleen Sebelius is a top contender to head HHS. She doesn’t have any background in healthcare like Dean but as a governor she does have administrative experience. I don’t see any meaningful reform or improvement in our healthcare system if she gets the job though. Why can’t Obama appoint a real liberal or healthcare advocate to this position? I suppose the answer is obvious: because he doesn’t want one.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29074415/


NelsonAlgren | Sunday February 8, 2009 08:59 am 16
In response to Millineryman @ 2

It is obvious. They don’t care. They’d rather be corporate whores. Look at Bill Clinton’s speech last night at the Virgina Jefferson-Jackson dinner. He was wondering why can’t we all just get along. Why should we get along with crazy people like the current GOP? Does Clinton even know about the disgrace that this stimulus bill is?


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:01 am 17
In response to Christy Hardin Smith @ 4

There’s no excuse. I don’t get why there seems to be a deep rooted desire of the conservative element to create poverty here while there are so many people who struggle everyday in poverty and many who work to reduce the level of suffering around the world.

Human capital is worth more then a tax cut.


Primrose | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:02 am 18
In response to demi @ 3

You borrow someone’s electric bill and say you are sharing or you are subletting or whatever it takes. Fortunately, most schools don’t operate as a arm to a police or immigration investigation. They want a piece of paper, and they use what they get. Of course, as some in our society look for scapegoats, things can change.

School districts (particularly desirable ones) have been “investigating” where students live for over 20 years (personal experience). Some go farther than others, depending on the principal, the resources, and the politics.


Ann in AZ | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:03 am 19

Arizona has reported increasing numbers of kids attending school who are homeless due to foreclosure and/or loss of parents’ jobs.

And the legislature is furious that they now cannot blame the Dem governor and have to deal with it all by themselves. So I’ve actually heard them spew, “She abandoned the state,” about Janet’s new position. Bunch of do-nothing dummies!


Mauimom | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:03 am 20

Christy, has anyone done an analysis of the “tax cuts” that were placed in the stimulus bill(s) to lure those oh-so-concerned Republicans?

I think an effective campaign could be waged contrasting the items that were cut from the bill with the Lovely Tax Cuts that were ushered in.

Just askin’


billybugs | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:03 am 21

Thanks for this post Christy
I work a second job during the winter when my business is slow. I am a councilor in a home for teenaged boys.The kids I work with are societies cast offs ,several of the boys don’t even know who their parents are.
These guys are the lucky ones ,they are now in the system and will receive the care they need. Unfortunately
for every kid that gets help there are dozens more that get no help.
We know if we can get to these kids soon enough we can spare them from a life of crime and incarceration ,I would like to see more of our tax dollars go to programs like ours than to the building of more jails!


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:06 am 22
In response to Mauimom @ 20

I don’t know that has been done, but I’m the wrong person to talk to about doing it. My math skillz are far too rusty — but I’d love to see someone do that math that knows what they are doing.


PriscillaQOB | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:07 am 23
In response to Millineryman @ 17

Human capital is worth more then a tax cut.

Amen! What I see happening here in the deep South is a huge surge in gang crime. Gee, wonder why? Parents who are working 3 0r 4 minimum-wage, part-time jobs are not home to care for their increasingly lonely and alienated children, who in turn see Mom and Dad busting their backs to keep a roof over their heads and some food on the table. Along comes the local gang recruiter in a new car with pockets full of cash. How in the world does anyone expect decency, morality, and hard work to compete with that when the reward for doing the right thing is foreclosure, hunger, family destruction, and despair?

We will certainly reap the whirlwind as a result of these nutty Republican/conservative policies. But the Washington heads remain in the sand and the ears remain blocked to all reasonable dialog. We have sold our future already and the bill is coming due very soon, I fear.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:07 am 24
In response to billybugs @ 21

Budgets are stretched so tight right now for kids in foster care or alternative care, it’s just depressing when you start thinking about what they really need and what they are actually getting.


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:08 am 25

Our kids at my school (families would be classified as “working poor”) have been under increasingly horrific economic pressures over the last 2 years – I can’t imagine what this latest bout of bullshit is going to bring… We are seeing a lot more untreated illnesses, a lot more kids with dirty clothes and no baths – which didn’t used to be…

I am sick to my stomach and in tears at the chopping out of the education funds in this supposed bail out… class sizes will increase by 1/3rd and our kids need a lot more intervention than that will allow…


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:11 am 26

MoDo had this in her NYT’s column today, about the lack of bipartianship on the part of the Republicans and Obama ,and the rest of us, getting punked:

“I would rather do the right thing and have one term than be mediocre and have two,” Mr. Obama told House Democrats at their Williamsburg retreat Thursday night. The lawmakers had been feeling disillusioned that they were carrying Mr. Obama’s water on the bill, while Obama aides triangulated and promised that the bill would “improve” in the Senate.

Nancy Pelosi told her leadership team that she had told the president, “I don’t mind you driving the bus over me, but I don’t appreciate your backing it up and running over me again and again.”


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:12 am 27
In response to billybugs @ 21

Thanks billybugs for what you do!


ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:12 am 28

What’s the problem? They can always scrounge those little packets of ketchup out of the trashbins that reside behind McDonald’s. And as we know from the Reagan administration, “ketchup is a vegetable”.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:13 am 29

Something I would really love is for some of the teachers and social workers who read here to do some diaries on Oxdown. I personally promise to send them to folks on the Hill who ought to know real world problems that folks are facing. In detail.


billybugs | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:13 am 30

Workers in our agency have not received raises in 8 years.!!!


ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:17 am 31

I like that idea. However, I’m not so sure these idiots are even capable of absorbing such information. They would simply revert back to talking points that roughly equate to the notion that, “ketchup is a vegetable”.


PriscillaQOB | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:17 am 32

Christy I will try to do that. I have been hesitant to get more involved in the public debate because my district is very conservative and Republican and they frown upon uppity teachers speaking in public. Getting fired for exercising my constitutional rights isn’t such a bad thing but right now I’m already on the razor’s edge financially. I guess it’s in for a penny, in for a pound time though. Thanks for the encouragement!


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:21 am 33
In response to PriscillaQOB @ 32

You can do it without identifying the district or location information if you think it will cause you problems. I absolutely don’t want folks to do something that will endanger their own job — if it makes you uncomfortable, then please don’t. But if you can provide some info on what the kids are going through without endangering your job, I’d love it.

Because members of Congress need to know that this isn’t some abstract exercise, it’s painful for these kids. And the folks who work with them.


ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:24 am 34
In response to PriscillaQOB @ 32

I can relate. I live in the congressional district of the illustrious Ken Calvert, one of congress’ 20 most corrupt member for three years running, and dumber than a bag of hammers. (And he keeps getting reelected, go figure.) However, I do write him. In fact, I sent a note a few night’s back that should have singed his eyebrows. Did it have an effect? Well…the latest “newsletter” from his office contains nothing about the dire economic situation, but instead deals with the threat of “illegal aliens” coming over the border. Pandering to the LCD, as usual. I do persist, though.


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:25 am 35

I highly recommend Oxdown, it’s a great tool.

I’ve successfully used it to push along something I’ve been working on. It’s user friendly, and please don’t feel intimidated by by it. The tools that new media offers present opportunities to take action like never before. Innovation and power is in our hands and the more we use it, the more success we’ll have.


JohnAnderson | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:26 am 36
In response to AZ Matt @ 26

I’m no particular fan of Pelosi’s, but she’s absolutely right about this. The Republican Wind Machine put it all on her–”The Pelosi Stimulus”–because they didn’t dare take on a president with an 85% approval rating.

Of course, the president with the 85% approval rating, in his zest for Kumbaya “bipartisanship,” didn’t care to take on the Republicans at that point either.

And now Obama’s numbers are significantly down. A lot of political capital will have been used when this “stimulus” bill passes–and, especially, after the latest phase of the bank bailout is announced.

In a year, in two years, no one will remember or care anything about “bipartisanship.” All they’ll care about is whether or not the economy has turned around or at least appears to be on the road to a turnaround. This is what the president’s smartest advisors should be telling him–and he should listen to them when they do.


wigwam | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:26 am 37

Why are Democrats betraying their mandate and the people who elected them by making these concessions to Republicans who won’t vote for this bill in any case? Perhaps they hope the Republicans won’t filibuster? Nonsense. The Republicans will do whatever their sponsors tell them to.

They’ll never stop threatening until the Democrats call their bluff, and now is the best time to do it. Make those bastards make their silly arguments in front of the American people every day, while more and more Americans lose their jobs.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:29 am 38
In response to JohnAnderson @ 36

Beyond frustrating, isn’t it? Way, way beyond.

SIGH

In cheerier news, I made some apple pecan pancakes for lunch here for everyone. Because, frankly, I needed a little comfort food — even if they were whole wheat and wheat germ fortified. *g*


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:30 am 39

I trying to figure out if I can get a tractor to come and tear out the front lawn of the school and replace with a vegetable garden to start an inner city farmer’s market… then maybe we could get some of those agribuisness funds…

the future is not looking too good.


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:33 am 40
In response to Christy Hardin Smith @ 7

Just went and read the homeless encampment article. What is interesting is to read the comments, some were so very cold-hearted. I guess Christian values don’t seem to operate with the wingnuts.


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:35 am 41
In response to AZ Matt @ 40

It’s amazing how smug the “it won’t happen to me” set can sound before that medical bill emergency coupled with a job loss and mortage refinancing failure hits home. Then, no longer so smug.

I’ve found that the more compassionate I am going through life, the less smug I feel. Those folks ought to try it — it’s a much, much better way to live.


wigwam | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:37 am 42
In response to AZ Matt @ 40

For them, Christianity is to be worn, not practiced. “Whited sepulchres.”


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:42 am 43
In response to OldCoastie @ 39

Where is your school located?


JohnAnderson | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:45 am 44

I think the word is “appalling.”

Wish I were there. I would dive into those pancakes. Might even improve my attitude!


barbara | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:45 am 45
In response to AZ Matt @ 40

Back in the day, when jobs were plentiful and workers scarce, the HR department of a Fortune 100 company changed the job description for a particular job, which originally read: “Must be able to read and comprehend instructions” to “Must be able to read instructions.” I apply this frequently to right-wing religious radicals. And maybe even to some who’re not so radical.


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:45 am 46
In response to AZ Matt @ 43

So Cal


posaune | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:47 am 47

and Billy:

DC Child and Family Services is proposing “early emancipation” to reduce the numbers of the 3,400 children in foster care. By the way, DC population these days is about 400,000. Foster kids? Almost 1% of the population. What if they could vote?


billybugs | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:47 am 48

Change won’t come easily ,there are some folks in DC that don’t want change and will do any thing they can to block it. The people voted for change the Repukes defy them at their own peril !!


ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:48 am 49

Apple-pecan pancakes made with wheat flour and fortified with wheat germ? mmmmm….


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:50 am 50
In response to OldCoastie @ 46

I think you can find someone to plow up your school lawn. You might want to call the County Cooperative Extension Office and get some advice and they might be able to help you locate the equipement and and operator. If you make the project a in-school 4-H project and that will help with educational resources so it can fit your school’s educational goals.


oldgold | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:51 am 51

Chisty, This post represents the kind of information that needs to get out to the public about how the cuts made to the stimulus bill are going to hurt the most vulnerable.

But, the media rather than informimg us as to the real cost of the cuts, glosses over that and uses cheap and easy metaphors, like the stimulus bill was given a damn “haircut. “
This does not illluminate an issue, but like here, obscures it. This misuse of language and the damage it causes enrages me. I wrote about this very thing yesterday.


billybugs | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:54 am 52
In response to posaune @ 47

3400 kids seems like a lot ,I wonder how this compares with other major cities?


Christy Hardin Smith | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:56 am 53
In response to ShotoJamf @ 49

I know — tastes decadent, actually wholesome…win-win. Especially when you serve them with no-sugar-added cinnamon-spiked applesauce. Nummy!


PriscillaQOB | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:57 am 54

The latest Republican talking point, I guess: We are fearmongering! Yes, that’s exactly what we are trying to do — get people to understand and fear the results of Republican/conservative insanity, Senator!

http://thinkprogress.org/2009/…..r-layoffs/

Acccording to Think Progress, here’s what Sen. Ensign (R – NV) had to say about this on Meet The Press this morning:

To get back to what Congressman Frank said, is that we’re going to be laying off teachers and firefighters. You know, that’s just fearmongering. We’re not going to be doing that in any of the states. … [The states’] budgets are bloated, the federal government’s budget is bloated. What we should be doing is cutting back.

Compare/contrast with the facts:

Florida has cut aid to local school districts for the current year by $140 per pupil. South Carolina has cut per-pupil funding by $95 in the current year. Maine has cut K-12 funding about $140 per pupil; this comes on top of education cuts earlier this year that were targeted to reduce specific programs. Georgia’s governor has proposed cutting aid to local school districts for the current year by $115 per pupil, and for the coming fiscal year by $189 per pupil.

At my school we have run out of paper to make copies for the rest of the year — we are fundraising to buy more because our supply budget was cut so severely last year. A full one-third of my students on the first day of school have moved away due to loss of jobs/housing. My children are suffering from recurrent respiratory infections because their parents cannot afford the medication they might be prescribed if they could actually get them in to see a doctor who accepts their limited insurance. Children are hoarding food and taking it home so they will have something, anything, to eat during the evening/on weekends.

Senator, there is a word for what you are that I won’t publish on this blog. We laid off hundreds of teachers in this state last year and we have been told to prepare for more severe cuts next year and that we will likely be losing our librarian/media specialist, music teacher, art teacher, and math and reading coaches. All will be forced to retire or take a classroom job bumping out a less senior teacher who will have to try to find a job in a market where nearly every district in the state has a hiring freeze on until further notice.

Get your Senatorial rear end out of DC and into the neighborhoods where the people you supposedly represent live and take a good look at what you have wrought. You won’t like it — I guarantee it!


JClausen | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:57 am 55

I am appalled at the cuts outlined above. 31 years with a teaching license trying to help those lower 20% who every teacher knows need it. Now its everyone. we’d best sink or swim together.

CHS,
I really appreciate your passion for these issues. I will call and call and call cuz everytime i have become discouraged you all pick me up around here. Thanks Jim Clausen


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 09:57 am 56
In response to AZ Matt @ 50

I’m just starting to orbit in the Extension office direction… I think the biggest (by far) hurdle is getting my enormous, bureaucracy laden district to approve the the plowing…

Also, need to get more teachers at the school on board…. So far, I only have a classroom tomato growing contest going on… and even that move is taking a lot of effort… I’m not in charge of anything except for the computer lab… and I’m not sure I will have a job next year…

lots of teachers may be gone… we are expecting 30-50% of the long time teachers (> 7 years) to be displaced… which works out to one more disruption to the stability of these kids…


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:04 am 57
In response to OldCoastie @ 56

I just sent off a grant request to a California Indian Tribe for funding a summer arts program here at the Hopi Reservation. I won’t hear anything for several more weeks and whether I get the money remains to be seen. I don’t know what are some of close reservations with casinos are for you, perhaps Pechanga, but find out what their community outreach procedures are and submit a proposal. It makes them look good and does some good.


billybugs | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:08 am 58

How many readers are planning veggie gardens this spring ? Just wondering!


ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:08 am 59
In response to OldCoastie @ 56

30 to 50%? That’s ugly. One would think those numbers would be high enough to start mobilizing some Real Effort in the direction of DC. Large turnouts, whether in the form of calls, letters or actual visits, are, I fear, the only thing that will jump start this process. Anything less is (essentially) being ignored on Capitol Hill these days…to say nothing of the MSM.


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:09 am 60
In response to AZ Matt @ 57

thanks, Matt… I hadn’t thought of that…

We’ve got a huge “campus”… we back up to a nursery and the Edison right of way… I’m guessing we have close to 10 acres of playground… seems like we could at least supplement the neighborhood food supply (if the ground is not too polluted from all that asphalt) with a few of those acres…

if nothing else, I’ll get those kids growing tomatoes at home… that may be all I can do this year…


dakine01 | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:14 am 61

Ms Christy,
I did a Diary on Friday titled The Future of Social Services During an Economic Crisis as my attempt to raise the issue (linking to your two-part Mortgaging the Future series)


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:17 am 62
In response to ShotoJamf @ 59

it is ugly… we are lucky in 2 ways at our school… the neighborhood is pretty stable – not a lot of kids coming and going throughout the school year (many of the kids’ parents attended the same school) and a stable staff… though many are younger – this job at this school takes the vigor of youth.

We have about half the teachers with 5, 6, 7, 8 years of experience teaching there… young enough to do the job, experienced enough to get the job done… with enough teachers with 30 years of experience to help keep things moving along… I dunno – it’s a nice mix…

But class sizes in the lower grades (20 per class, K-3) will increase all across the district to 35/ class… so, what happens to all those younger teachers? they get laid off… and “special programs” (like mine) get cut…

We are going to go from an educational institution to a warehouse for kids…

it grieves me.


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:19 am 63
In response to OldCoastie @ 60

ShotoJamf | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:26 am 64
In response to wigwam @ 37

I agree. Anything less is a betrayal, plain and simple. And if they would ever grow enough of a collective spine to apply such an approach, I would suggest that they use Krugman, Reich, Stiglitz, Roubini, etal to back up their positions. It’s time to open up with everything, make such an importunate ruckus that the MSM can’t ignore it any longer.


OldCoastie | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:28 am 65
In response to Millineryman @ 63

beautiful! (but YIKES! 400 bucks to attend a 2-day workshop??)


Millineryman | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:30 am 66
In response to OldCoastie @ 65

Yes I know, however it’s good to know your vision is current to a trend that’s happening which means there will be resources of information to build your case.


oldgold | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:40 am 67

Now they are callin it “Stimpy!” Yes, it is clever and all of that, but it hides the carnage.
Sputtering and cussing into my coffee. I need to get off my ass and do more.


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:40 am 68
In response to Millineryman @ 63

We have one school with a modern greenhouse on the rez that has a resource person to help teachers set up their eduational programs. Gila Crossing Schools, a elemetary and middle school on the Gila River Reservation south of Phoenix, have greenhouses and gardens plus a staff person to oversee their programs.


PriscillaQOB | Sunday February 8, 2009 10:55 am 69

Oxdown diary posted: Yes, Children Are Already Casualties

http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/3531


nahant | Sunday February 8, 2009 11:17 am 70

Repukes don’t care about anyone’s kids but their own! It is time this nation decides that children ARE our country’s future and invests in their future! If we follow the Repukes we WILL leave all but the Rich’s children behind and we will fall into a 3rd world country!


musicsleuth | Sunday February 8, 2009 11:26 am 71
In response to billybugs @ 58

I ordered the lasagna gardening books. Our soil is better suited for making bricks than growing veggies. My goal is to set up some raised beds in the backyard — hopefully in time for summer crops.


Ann in AZ | Sunday February 8, 2009 11:27 am 72
In response to AZ Matt @ 68

When the veggies are grown, do you also teach the children about business by letting them set up someplace to sell their veggies? And they learn how to budget for next year’s crop and to fund raise for stuff the school needs but the budget does not allow?


musicsleuth | Sunday February 8, 2009 11:36 am 73
In response to wigwam @ 37

Way past time for this now, but I’ll take what I can get. I really wish the original proposal was bolder than the one we got — education funding and more support for the states were about the most encouraging pieces of the package and now they are out. Where is the change that we voted for?


AZ Matt | Sunday February 8, 2009 11:46 am 74
In response to Ann in AZ @ 72

The vegeies at Gila Crossing are used i the schools or given to elder program. The Hopi school kids take the pepper and tomato starts home for their parents gardens and farms.


smartlady | Sunday February 8, 2009 12:33 pm 75

My Florida Panhandle School District is asking people to write our legislatures in red crayon to ask that funding be restored.


CarolynU | Sunday February 8, 2009 04:25 pm 76

Heartless bastards. We are all New Orleans now. Let them eat cake indeed. Do none of these people read history?


Mauimom | Sunday February 8, 2009 06:05 pm 77

Because members of Congress need to know that this isn’t some abstract exercise, it’s painful for these kids.

Unfortunately, Christy, from my experience in working on Capitol Hill, I can tell you that it will take something extra-ordinary to get a Congressperson to actually SEE such reports/blogs.

Incoming mail is filtered and distributed to a staff of folks responsible for answering it. Perhaps in small, district offices of a House member one could actually get a letter/blog etc. to a staffie who might get it to the Congresscritter.

A Senator represents so many constituents that it’s impossible to get anything to him/her.

Your best bet for achieving Congresscritter attention is to either get your missive into the hands of someone high up in the indidvidual Congressperson’s staff, or get it published in a local paper.

As you can see, one of the problems is that these folks just don’t have any idea what’s going on in their district/state or the country.

I should add that if you’re trying to communicate with a just-elected Congresscritter, you might have slightly better luck: they won’t have established their screening system yet.


mui1 | Monday February 9, 2009 10:03 am 78

The situation is getting worse. There are state cuts in CT. And I hear of grinding poverty from grammar school teachers in Bridgeport and high school teachers in CT. Like the no-food issue for instance. This is not what we dems voted for last November. IMHO education and children’s health services are emergency, not pork.


1diane | Tuesday February 10, 2009 07:13 am 79

Not that it’s an answer to the big problems outline here, but for schools…

kids who lose their homes due to hardship are usually considered homeless and their educational rights are protected by a federal law, the McKinney-Vento Homeless Education Act.

More info on our website: http://www.hearus.us.


Sorry but the comments are closed on this post
Sunday Cuppa
Nemo’s Lessons About The Economy

Close