Magi
JZAH wrote:
> School officials slam Bush plan for military kids
>
> Friday, February 7, 2003 Posted: 7:47 AM EST (1247 GMT)
>
> WASHINGTON (AP) -- School officials nationwide are criticizing a
> proposal in President Bush's budget to stop compensating them for
> teaching children of military personnel who are not living on bases.
>
> School administrators say the plan is particularly galling because
> Bush also is asking some parents of these kids to get ready to go to
> war with Iraq.
>
> "We've got bases that are deploying troops and if these children go
> unfunded, as opposed to no child left behind, we'll be leaving all
> military children behind," Robert Edmonson, controller of the Copperas
> Cove, Texas, school district, said Thursday.
>
> The federal government helps fund public school districts that educate
> children who live on military bases, making up for lost local taxes.
>
> Bush's proposed budget, submitted this week, envisions eliminating
> children of military personnel who live off base from the funding
> formula used to calculate the in-lieu-of-taxes payments.
>
> Edmonson said his district, where many Fort Hood children attend
> school, would lose $9.5 million, about 20 percent of its operating
> budget.
>
> A total of 1,300 school districts receive what is known as impact aid
> from the federal government because they can't assess taxes on federal
> property or tribal reservations, but still have to educate children
> whose parents live or work there.
>
> The administration would still include in the formula the 142,000
> children who live on military bases and attend local public schools.
> However, the 240,000 military children who live off base would no
> longer be counted in calculating the payments.
>
> Bush also is proposing to eliminate payments for children of civilians
> working on government property and children living in federally owned
> low-income housing projects.
>
> "If these students are living off base in private property, then the
> district is receiving property tax to pay for their education," said
> Amy Call, a spokeswoman for the White House Office of Management and
> Budget.
>
> That explanation doesn't satisfy Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Texas, whose
> district includes Fort Hood. The Army post already has deployed the
> 12,500-member 4th Infantry Division and other military personnel in
> the buildup for any war with Iraq.
>
> "What the bean counters at OMB missed is you simply don't send
> servicemen and women off to the Iraqi theater and as soon as they get
> on the plane tell them, 'By the way, we are cutting education funding
> for your children, who will be back here at home,"' Edwards said.
>
> John Deegan, superintendent of Nebraska's 9,000-student Bellevue
> Public School District near Offutt Air Force Base, said his system
> would lose $7 million. "I'm not sure how I can explain that to mothers
> of military soldiers who have been deployed," Deegan said.
>
> The unified school district in San Diego would lose about $3.5
> million, said its controller, Richard Knott. He said his school
> district already is laying off people because of state budget cuts.
>
> John Forkenbrock, executive director of the National Association of
> Federally Impacted Schools, said the government pays an average $3,500
> per child to local school districts for children living on base but
> not attending schools run by the Defense Department. For children of
> military personnel living off base, the payments average between $700
> and $800 per child, he said.
>