Florida’s False Choice: Taxpayers Being Duped into Choosing Between Education and Medical Care
by Education Action GroupTALAHASSEE, Fla. – What’s happened to Florida Gov. Rick Scott?
When Scott took office earlier this year, he wasted no time establishing himself as a bold education reformer by placing limits on teacher tenure, basing teacher pay on student achievement, and increasing the number of charter schools.
Scott deserves credit for getting those reforms across the finish line, but he seems to have lost his nerve for bold action in the current fight over school funding.
Instead of explaining to taxpayers how Florida’s public school budgets are being overrun by special interest labor unions, Scott is sounding like a spokesman for the Florida Education Association, telling lawmakers he will “not sign a budget … that does not significantly increase state funding for education.”
Scott says he wants to “invest” – a favorite union buzzword – a billion more dollars into public education, and would pay for it by cutting $2 billion in Medicaid reimbursements to hospitals.
State Democrats wasted little time in framing Scott’s proposal as “school books versus seniors.” That’s a pretty harsh but nonetheless accurate analysis.
Scott is buying into (and selling) the faulty premise that Florida’s public schools are being underfunded by taxpayers. Instead, the governor’s focus should be on how school employee unions divert millions of dollars away from classrooms and into expensive, goodie-filled labor contracts that benefit adult employees at the expense of students.
And there are far too many employee unions sucking too much money from Florida school budgets.
In addition to teacher unions, Florida’s public schools are awash in unions for custodians, mechanics, daycare workers, bus drivers, bus aides, security personnel, office personnel, interpreters for deaf students, groundskeepers, painters, plumbers, carpenters, delivery personnel – the list seems endless.
An EAG investigation found that Florida’s 10 largest school districts use 117 unique salary schedules – as defined in collectively bargained contracts – to pay non-instructional employees. These salary schedules guarantee employees an automatic pay raise every year, whether their districts can afford it or not.
In addition to automatic raises, many union contracts contain dozens of costly provisions for things like free or low-cost health insurance, free or low-cost pension plans and generous reimbursement for unused sick or personal days. The contractual perks cause school labor budgets to balloon as state aid continues to decrease.
Earlier this year, the St. Petersburg Times reported that payouts for unused sick days cost the Miami-Dade County school district around $20 million and the Pinellas County district nearly $10 million.
As a result, low-seniority teachers are laid off, academic programs are cut and extracurricular activities wither away. The schools certainly have a money problem, but it’s not due to a lack of revenue. It has more to do with their bad habit of paying too much for labor and spending too little on kids.
Instead of offering false budget choices of “hospitals or schools,” Gov. Scott would do well to educate Florida citizens about how the unions have turned public school budgets into their private financial playground.
The Santa Rosa model
Some Florida schools have managed to weather the financial storm on their own by tackling runaway labor costs.
The Santa Rosa district is a good example. Like most districts, it has felt the effects of decreased state aid. Santa Rosa’s current operating budget is about $15 million less than last year’s budget.
But school officials did not have to hit the panic button, or demand tax increases to maintain their programs. Instead they made some “tough decisions,” including the privatization of their food, custodial and transportation programs, a gradual process that began in the 1990s.
“(The tough decisions) are paying dividends because we are very solvent and we are able to navigate through the next year without too much concern,” Superintendent Tim Wyrosdick recently told NWFDailyNews.com.
Jim Crane, director of purchasing and contract administration for Santa Rosa schools, helped implement the district’s privatization plan, which was among the first in the state. He’s seen the benefits of privatization first hand.
“We’re saving millions per year because we contracted out, and we’re getting better service,” Crane told EAG. “It’s been a net plus for us.”
Crane notes the district’s switch to privatization was very gradual. Instead of replacing union employees with private sector counterparts immediately, Santa Rosa decided to replace employees through attrition. As they quit or retire, they’re replaced with contracted workers.
Eighteen years ago, two-thirds of Santa Rosa’s custodial staff were district employees, and were paid according to contractually negotiated salary schedules. That’s down to two percent today.
When salary and benefits are averaged out, a custodian employed directly by the district costs twice as much as a privately contracted custodian, Crane said. District-employed transportation employees cost one-third more than their private sector counterparts.
Privatization hasn’t solved all of Santa Rosa’s financial woes. The district has been forced to lay off teachers over the past few years. But it would be in much worse shape without the moves.
Crane said districts should consider privatization, but warns “it’s not a panacea either.”
“Successful privatization doesn’t just happen,” he said. “It takes a district working closely with a contractor. It requires a partnership.”
Charter school spending focused on students
Tim Kitts is the founding principal of Bay Haven Charter Academy, which educates 2,000 students in five charter schools in Florida.
Charter schools receive about 10 percent less funding than traditional public schools, making state budget cuts even more difficult to absorb. Bay Haven charters have been forced to tighten their budgets, but they’ve never done it at the expense of students.
BHCA has consolidated and cut administrative and clerical positions in order to balance its budget, but it has not made any cuts to the teaching or paraprofessional staff.
“Any position that has direct contact with kids – teachers, paraprofessionals, intervention specialists – we’ve kept intact,” Kitts said. “We’ve kept our commitment to academics and to the fine arts.”
Kitts noted that BCHA’s teachers, food service workers and bus drivers are all employees of the academy, and none of them are unionized. That means labor costs are lower and more money is available for instruction.
When asked if his peers at traditional public schools care envious of Bay Haven’s lack of employee unions, Kitts replied, “That would be an understatement.”
“In traditional schools, employees think they have a right to a guaranteed career. It’s hard for people to break that mental cycle,” Kitts said.
Kitts believes the schools’ management and staff work cooperatively, with the understanding that the schools exist to serve the students, not the adults.
“Like parents and students, our employees choose to come here,” he said.







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19 Comments
Charter schools receive about 10 percent less funding than traditional public schools
- And their students are 20% smarter.
Everyone has a weakness.
I wonder which group has discovered Gov. Scott's?
Hmmm…
Chicken Little – 1943
It's the tale of Chicken Little, only with Foxy Loxy being a cunning villain who uses a number of psychological tactics to drive a farm-ful of animals into a cave to be eaten. Slightly disturbing and quite political at the same time. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vnp4kj5lLOU
It's the spending, for spending's sake, stupid. It's no longer the economy, it's the spending. When the big government funding of the political donors came to light, such as Solyndra, the game changed.
The Federal Pay Gap
http://vimeo.com/15005181
"The time is near at hand which must determine whether Americans are to be free men or slaves."
George Washington
Cut out the Public Unions and all of their overhead, and the state will have a surplus in the budget. We must end union control if we are ever going to get this economy moving again.
Dear Gov.Scott you were elected for a reason and you can be voted out of office for the same reason. Stop the spending.
Is this a parody? "I got a C in PE in 8th grade. Its the Union's fault!"
Florida has MANY problems with its schools. Foremost being corruption and incompetence. Quick quiz: how many Ft. Lauderdale former School Board members are in prison or awaiting trial?
The incompetence portion starts with administrators in the schools who operate for political reasons and their own power, and ends with teacher pay based on test scores (to call it "student achievement" is a misnomer).
Scott is feckless and incompetent himself, so what should we expect? Well, its Florida, so what is going on there is exactly what we should expect. Fraud and corruption are the primary industries of Florida.
The questions is, does Rick Scott have a strength? Other than keeping hair off his head. Ah, only in Florida.
He'll probably sign onto some tax increase in Florida to pay for it, in the end. After refusing to sign onto high speed rail, he turned around and put his approval on Sunrail, a rail line that will run through Orlando, with no funds for it so far, other than what the federal government has kicked in. He's rotten. Typical rich guy who wants to be remembered as a good socialist. Romney would be the same as President, as he was in Massachusetts.
Why are Marxists complaining about the cut in Medicaid to pay for Marxist teacher union salaries? After all, they don't care about poor people anyway.
MEDICAID is NOT for seniors, MEDICARE is! Medicaid is for the dregs of society who have been sucking the hard earned cash out of our pockets for far too long.
Rick Scott has los his cojones!
Hmmm, this is yet another display of exactly why conservatives are demanding as their presidential candidate someone strong enough to stand for principled issues rather than falling prey to the opposition, and someone whom they know will not change or spin their political positions like a wind-up ballerina..
One does not have to be a cryptographer to decipher the code……… educational funding = teachers' benefits. Of a buck in funding, how much translates to teachers' salaries,pensions and other benefits? Answer: A lot!
Every politician will do tomorrow what they did yesterday, regardless of what they say today. Look at their record before you vote!
Governor Scott needs to be Impeached, and Removed From Office…. or Recalled, whichever comes first, but he needs fired.
Seems charter schools have less, yet do better than their "competitors' in public schools where it seems the idea is to make more while doing less. Students learn more in charters and less in public schools. Doesn't take a rocket scientist to do the math. Charters = lower cost and better educated students. Public schools = higher cost and lower student achievement. The big difference is the public sector unions are parasites on taxpayer backs. It's not for the kids; it's for the unions.
Here's a brilliant f'n idea. Why don't we let the people choose how to spend their own money and take the government out of the equation entirely. Education and medical care are services, not functions of the state.
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