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Arizona Senate cuts $200 million dollars MORE from K-12 Education…Ask Governor to Support Strong Schools for a Strong Economy

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Dear Members and Concerned Citizens of Arizona,

As we all know, K-12 public education in Arizona is still reeling from hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts suffered over the past few fiscal years. The governor’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2012 includes cuts to K-12 education totaling approximately $125 million.  Yesterday, March 16th, 2011, the Senate worked late into the night to pass a budget that includes devastating cuts to K-12 education.  This is no surprise considering the extreme make-up of the Senate.  The Senate budget cuts over $260 million from K-12 funding.

I am asking for your help with this statewide issue.  No single issue carries more impact than Arizona’s budget for fiscal year 2012.  Accordingly, contact from our members, leaders, parents, and concerned citizens to the governor and their legislators is key and will be critical over the next week. This is what we can do and we must do to stop these terrible cuts from being put into place. Your stories are key to painting an accurate and critically needed story of the impact on programs, personnel, and students of continued cuts to public education.  You can and should contact members of the House of Representatives that represent your area as well as respond to this posting. We know the cuts in the Creighton School District this year have not been nice and with loosing positions which have impact on students and services, it will make running our schools very different. Even if you’re position has not yet been eliminated, you still can tell your story of how we have been frozen on salary advancement for the past three years, this year we have an increase in retirement contributions, we’re also paying a portion of our medical insurance cost, and for many who are on the career ladder program, we’re facing a loss in salary there as well. You can share how the limited resources we have in our district have impacted us doing even more than what we are now doing. We’ll see the number of our colleagues in our buildings decrease because of loss of enrollment in our schools done by natural staffing. I don’t mean to paint a gloom picture, however, it is very dark out there right now and will be even darker if these cuts make their way into implementation.

One last request: Our messaging to policy makers will be impassioned and powerful, but it must in all cases be professional.  No matter what the temptation and outrage you may feel, I urge you to create impact through facts, examples, and stories – rather than through the rhetoric of anger and accusation.  We want our messages read thoroughly if they are to have any effect on policy makers’ decisions. We face an immediate opportunity to minimize the damage done to our schools through the remainder of the legislative session, particularly as the state budget is forwarded to the House and then to the governor.  Over the next few weeks there will be other specific actions where you may be asked to organize local response.  Thank you for your leadership and cooperation.

Copy the link below to send a message to your elected officials about the budget cuts and tell your personal story about the impact these cuts will have.  Our messages to policy makers should be impassioned and powerful, but must also be professional.  No matter what the temptation and outrage you may feel, we urge you to create impact through facts, examples, and stories – rather than through the rhetoric of anger and accusation.  We want our messages read thoroughly if they are to have any effect on policy makers’ decisions.

http://capwiz.com/nea/az/utr/1/ANAZPEOXJW/HXSDPEPAVW/6625511481

If you have any questions, feel free to contact me.

Respectfully,
Jason Schnee

President

Creighton Education Association

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Governor Brewer Calls for Special Session of AZ Legislature targeting labor Unions

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

Governor Jan Brewer has called for a special session of the Arizona Legislature to address a ballot measure targeting labor unions.

The measure is designed to counter the proposed federal Employee Free Choice Act which would make it easier for employers to create a union through the majority sign-up process.

This action is another example of Arizona’s lack of leadership.  When the state is facing economic recession, high unemployment, and a budget deficit of over $1 billion, it is shocking to see our state’s leaders meeting in special session over something that does not address any of these issues.

The session was called after the Arizona Supreme Court ruled that the measure could not appear on the ballot in this year’s General Election because it violates the Arizona Constitution’s “single-subject rule.”  Although the measure does not affect AEA or the way local associations organize, the lawsuit was filed by organized labor and now the governor and legislative leaders are targeting labor unions by calling a special session to ensure this anti-union measure appears on the ballot, just as they called a special session nearly a year ago in order to enact policy changes to target teachers.

Arizona needs leaders who will address the needs of our state rather than engage in political retaliation against any group who speaks out against their lack of leadership.  AEA members, teachers, support staff, students, parents, and community members need to speak out against these kinds of actions and elect pro-public education leaders.  We must support those who support our public schools. Click here to find out our recommended candidates for the upcoming Primary Elections.

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AEA Press Release-Nov23rd, 2009

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Contact:     John M. Hartsell

Arizona Education Association

Public Relations

Phone:             602.407.2315

Cell Phone:      602.369.4506

E-Mail:            john.hartsell@arizonaea.org

For Immediate Release:

Phoenix, AZ – Today, November 23, 2009, the Arizona Education Association filed a special action petition with the Arizona Supreme Court against Governor Jan Brewer and the 49th State Legislature targeting policy changes made in the 3rd special session of the Arizona State Legislature aimed at teachers and other school employees.  The policy changes allow arbitrary reductions in salary, prohibit seniority as a criterion for reduction in force, eliminate deadlines for issuing contracts, and limit employee rights to engage in professional association activities.

John Wright, president of the Arizona Education Association, said, “These policies represent a complete abandonment of legislative leadership.  The special session was called to address Arizona’s budget deficit; instead, the legislature mysteriously determined that removing contract security and allowing salary reductions for career educators was a more appropriate focus.  The interests of Arizona’s families, students, and economy were completely ignored.”

The policy changes were passed by the legislature and signed into law by Governor Brewer as part of the 3rd special-session budget package.  According to attorney Roopali Desai, HB 2011 violates the state’s Constitution and thus is null and void.

Desai, an attorney from Coppersmith Schermer & Brockelman PLC., said, “In House Bill 2011, the Legislature violated the Arizona Constitution in at least four ways. The bill modified teachers’ employment contracts in an emergency special session that was called for the purpose of creating a budget, even though the employment terms that were changed are not related to the budget.

“This violates provisions of the Constitution intended to prevent precisely what happened here—the use of a special session to pass unrelated legislation that likely could not have been passed during regular session.”

The special action petition states that, “The Arizona Legislature exceeded its authority under the Governor’s call for special session when it enacted Sections 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 76 of HB 2011, which modify existing legislation relating to the employment of teachers by public school districts.  These provisions are not appropriations and are not related to the state budget.  In addition, the Legislature’s enactments fail to comply with constitutional provisions requiring single subject legislation and prohibiting impairment with contractual obligations.”

An excerpt from the special action suit as it was filed with the Supreme Court:

I.     SECTIONS 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, AND 76 OF HB 2011VIOLATE THE ARIZONA CONSTITUTION BECAUSE THEY ARE UNRELATED TO, AND GO BEYOND THE SCOPE OF, THE SUBJECTS IDENTIFIED IN THE GOVERNOR’S CALL FOR SPECIAL SESSION.

II.     SECTIONS 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, AND 76 ARE VOID BECAUSE HB 2011 VIOLATES THE ARIZONA CONSTITUTION BY ENCOMPASSING MORE THAN ONE SUBJECT AND COMBINING UNRELATED LEGISLATIVE GOALS, WHICH ARE NOT EXPRESSED IN THE TITLE OF THE ACT.

III.   SECTIONS 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, AND 76 ARE VOID BECAUSE HB 2011 VIOLATES THE ARIZONA CONSTITUTION BY COMBINING GENERAL LEGISLATION AND UNRELATED APPROPRIATIONS IN A SINGLE, NON-GENERAL APPROPRIATIONS BILL.

IV.    SECTIONS 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, AND 76 VIOLATE THE CONTRACT CLAUSES BECAUSE THEY NULLIFY existing  rights and benefits in public school teachers’  employment contracts.

V.     SECTIONS 16 AND 76 OF HB 2011 ARE VOID FOR VAGUENESS.

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The Arizona Education Association represents 34,000 teachers and education support professionals and is the state’s largest professional organization.

AEA…Keeping the Promise of a Quality Public Education

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CEA members and those supportive to education please take action

Thursday, August 13th, 2009
Take Action Urgent Action Needed! Ask Governor to Veto Budget

The Senate by Republican-only vote passed the budget bills minus the Governor’s key piece-the referral of the sales tax.  The budget that was passed today mirrors the budget that the Republican Legislature passed on June 30/July 1.  This means that the Governor will get the exact same budget bills she has already vetoed.  TAKE ACTION and ask the Governor to veto this budget today!
Procedurally the Senate passed the budget bills as passed the House except for two bills.  The first bill-the tax bill (HB2015 or SB1029) as it left the House did four main things: 1) referred to the voters the repeal of Prop 105 protected funds (which could raid Prop 301 revenue-the 2% inflator plus Classroom Site Fund monies), 2) created $400 million in new income tax cuts, 3) permanently repealed the school tax (state equalization property tax), and 4) referred a three-year sales tax and spending cap to the voters.  This bill failed today in the Senate.  The other bill-known as the revenue BRB-was amended in the Senate.  The change made in the Senate was to include the permanent repeal of the school tax into this budget bill.  This bill, SB1025, will now need to go back to the House and run through the full process (committee, caucus, COW and floor vote) before it can be transmitted to the Governor.  In addition, all the other budget bills have been transmitted back to the House (the chamber of origin) and are expected to be sent to the Governor once the House passes out the amended version of the revenue BRB (SB1025 as mentioned above).
To be clear, the bills that passed today include the cuts to education, the bad education policy changes, and the permanent repeal of the state equalization rate.  These were all components of the June 30/July 1 budget.
View today’s Senate vote on HB2011 (the K-12 budget bill).  Be sure to thank the Democratic Senators who voted no.
The Governor has vetoed this budget before, and we need her to veto it again.  Read Governor Brewer’s July 1 veto statement.
TAKE ACTION – Please e-mail the Governor and ask her to veto this budget again and start the process of bi-partisan budget negotiations.

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Governor cuts Education and blames it on overspending

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

The FY 09 budget was passed by the House and Senate on Saturday, January 31, at roughly 2:15 am. As it relates to K-12, here are the main provisions:

• Reduction of $98,198,000 to the base support level for FY 09 with a reduction to school district budget limits accordingly. To the extent possible, the base support level reductions shall be taken against administrative costs, rather than classroom instruction.

• $21,000,000 cut to soft capital.

• Exemption from both of the above cuts for school districts with less than 600 students.

• For FY 09, permits school districts to use their soft capital allocation for any operating or capital expenditures.

• Repeals the remaining $13,000,000 funding for statewide building renewal grants.

• We are looking at cuts of around $68 per child in the current school year!

The governor signed off on this budget before heading to the SuperBowl on Saturday morning, citing the reason we are here is because we have overspent in past years. However, with tax cuts put into place from before, and we are a growing state which requires us to spend more to keep up with the expansion of our state, this is flawed logic. This is a tough blow for us in education as the legislators only looked at a cuts mentality, when there were other options, which could have been deliberated.

Our only hope is that we receive federal stimulus monies, but that is still uncertain and there is no way to know how that money would be utilized if received. We have also heard from many of the legislators they do not want to accept the federal stimulus money, which is being debated in the US Senate now because it requires spending on education.

If you want to receive organizing information regarding the legislature and the state of education in Arizona, please forward your personal email and I’ll get you on the CEA email list.

We have a lot of work to do and I hope you’re all ready. The budget for next year is where the real pain can occur. This is only the beginning.

We have to talk with community members, parents, and fellow colleagues and let them know how children, teachers, school employees, and administrators are going to be effected by reducing the budget deficit on the backs of our kids and our schools.

Our School Board and Superintendent have hard choices and difficult decisions to make.

CSD is looking at the face of hard times. We need to work together.

I apologize for not having good news. Don’t be discouraged however! We did force the legislators to meet on a Friday, which they do not like doing plus they had to wait until the wee hours of the morning on Saturday, January 31st to do this when many were asleep and not paying attention.

We have the ability to sway opinions and change minds. We have the opportunity to express our thoughts and feelings to those we have elected into office.

The FY10 budget discussions will begin on Wednesday. Please continue to watch for more news on your home emails and facebook as well, this has become a new communication device many leaders across the state are using to reach members.

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Governor’s office taking poll on education cuts

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Arizona Ea is calling the Governor’s office at 602-542-4331 to oppose cuts to Education funding! We found out from another blog their was a poll being taken by the Governor’s office on the legislation happening.

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