About a week ago or so I learn we have 2 Billion + extra dollars this year for the state government of NC. Today I here that we are 912 million short on highway funds due to the federal government underfunding their previous projections. Am I the only one who sees a possible connection between these stories? Wouldn't these $$s be better spent on infrastructure then on whatever else the legislature is planning. State taxes suck here!
6/23/2006 1:09:43 AM
state taxes in NC do totally sucki remember in boot camp when we'd get our paltry paychecks on the 1st and the 15th...we were all getting paid at the same rate--the only difference was how much was deducted for our respective state taxes. almost everyone got paid more than i did.
6/23/2006 1:30:27 AM
Yeah, screw those greedy teachers. They don't need the surplus.But really... did they not see this over the horizon when they were talking about how to best spend teh surplus?[Edited on June 23, 2006 at 1:48 AM. Reason : .]
6/23/2006 1:34:14 AM
Greedy teachers?2 billion - 912 million = 1.088 billion =/= loose changeI was hoping that they would use the surplus to pay back the highway trust fund and the various municipalities the state stole, er borrowed, money from. But then Easley said that the state would never pay back that money.
6/23/2006 7:35:34 AM
They waste so much fucking money on the roads.It's highway robbery.
6/23/2006 9:14:39 AM
I say that we spend the $2 billion on a shit load of lottery tickets.
6/23/2006 10:20:12 AM
They could definitely spend more on the proper maintenance of the roads.Raiding a billion dollars out of the trust fund is a bit lame, especially when you've got the money to fill it back up (and you aren't doing it).Neglecting the highways will just fuck over the infrastructure in the long run (and then we'll just get to spend even more money on maintenance, repairs, and new construction).I'm sure they could also do a few tax cuts at this point as well... Unless we need about 200 teacup museums.
6/23/2006 3:27:26 PM
pay the senators and governors and different levels of council less
6/23/2006 3:38:23 PM
I bet we could save $ by investing a few million in fraud-investigators. Let's start an agency to trim the fat of all the other agencies, let's make agencies that sign-up unelligible individuals to their social programs responsible for that fraud. In my experience, social programs are pretty sloppy about allowing fraud. As long as they spend $ on x-number of people then they can say that NC helped those people. Wether those people actually needed or qualified for help is another issue. More accountablity on this issue would be great.
6/23/2006 4:06:57 PM
Yea, this shit pisses me off too.
6/23/2006 5:09:22 PM
$30,000 is not an acceptible white collar salary, yet it's what our teachers get paid.
6/23/2006 5:14:06 PM
6/23/2006 5:21:56 PM
^ personal deductions have a big effect. state income tax is pretty minimal.its real minimal here in Washington. like 0% minimal.[Edited on June 23, 2006 at 6:40 PM. Reason : ]
6/23/2006 6:37:45 PM
6/23/2006 7:05:48 PM
^ 1. Unpaid overtime more than negates two months off.2. What white collar jobs don't have benefits?3. The teachers should pay for a system that is beyond their comtrol?
6/23/2006 8:13:59 PM
6/23/2006 9:57:51 PM
The simple fact is that if you want to bring in talented people to do a job, you have to pay for it. If someone is talented at teaching, they could be making bank in the private sector doing something else. You have to be willing to pay for them to give up that private sector job.With that said, primary education is not something where you need the best and the brightest as teachers, especially since they just have to teach for the test nowadays.[Edited on June 23, 2006 at 10:02 PM. Reason : dsf]
6/23/2006 10:01:51 PM
6/24/2006 12:31:23 AM
I might get burned here but I believe any new teacher who complains about making $24,000 a year should stfu. Seriously you should have looked at how much schools pay teachers. You should know that's what you're going to make...$24,000 a year, with 2+ months of summer vacasion, + 2 weeks of vacation during... seriously... shut up already. You chose the career... you knew the price... take the time to earn a solid rep as a good teacher and then move to private schools where you'll make a good salary.EDIT ^... the problem is not teachers, it's lack of space for students. Schools are given money based on location, size of student base, and parental nagging. The whole Cary-ite thought process that thinks all public schools should look like Star Trek TNG, is what is costing so much money. If the money given to the schools could be used for the right things... aka not buying Athen's Drive Football team new jerseys with the students name on it ($2000+). It's bad use of plentiful resources. [Edited on June 24, 2006 at 1:02 AM. Reason : !]
6/24/2006 12:59:10 AM
6/24/2006 8:48:26 PM
Well, last I checked the average American public school system spends about as much on administration as it does on teachers salaries, so if we fired everyone in the "Department of Education" we could double the number of teachers. Would that work for you ^?
6/24/2006 10:42:04 PM
^but then who will supress the rights of children?[Edited on June 24, 2006 at 11:24 PM. Reason : ]
6/24/2006 11:24:33 PM
6/25/2006 1:07:09 AM
LoneSnark, I'd love to see some overhead cut, but none of this affects whether or not teachers should be paid what they deserve. It's a particular means to that end, but nothing more.But to address the overhead-- it's not some sort of conspiracy, guys. The school systems are given a whole lot of responsibilities by the state and federal gov'ts. The overhead is there to meet that demand, not to fill the coffers of the edomite principal's guild.mathman: "lollerz what do teachers know about teaching?!" So instead of teachers holding the power, should it be politicians?And yes, clearly we're opposed to vouchers because we want to monopolize the education market. It has nothing to do with what we think is best for the nation's education system (but again, what the hell do we know? You're the teaching expert!)
6/25/2006 2:09:31 AM
6/25/2006 9:40:44 AM
one of the main arguments in favor of against vouchers is that it gets the privatized school out from under the weight of all the state and federal regulations. Accomidating SPED, low SES, and handicapped children is what creates the need for much of the "weight".
6/25/2006 11:36:48 AM
6/25/2006 11:52:53 AM
I used the WCPSS 2004-05 budget to come up with some numbers:- For those classified as 'Professional Educator,' WCPSS spent $373,730,502 on 83,510.70 man-months of work. A professional educator in Wake County earns, on average, $4,475.24 per month and $53,702.89 per 12 months.- For those classified as 'Administration', WCPSS spent $45,319,741 on 7497.95 man-months of work. An administrator in Wake County earns, on average, $6,044.28 per month and $72,531.41 per 12 months.- Principals and Assistant Principals (classified as Administration) cost $20,885,371 for 4,197.00 man-months of work. On average, Principals and Assistant Principals earn $4,976.26 per month and $59,715.14 per 12 months (the actual numbers are $69,311.88 and $53,874.20 for Principals and Assistant Principals, recpectively).- If Principals and Assistant Principals are removed from the Administration numbers (differentiate between in-school and home office administration), the average administrator earns $7,402.22 per month and $88,826.68 per 12 months. The Superintendent earned $117,408.00 in 2004-05.Assuming that professional educators work 10 months and administrators work 12 months, WCPSS employed 8,351 educators and 625 administrators. Enrollment was 112,970. Professional educators can be further broken down into teachers and non-teachers (counselors, media specialists*, etc): 7,624 teachers and 727 non-teachers.Educator to student ratio: 1 : 13.53Teacher to student ratio: 1 : 14.82Administrator to student ratio: 1 : 180.75Administrator to educator ratio: 1 : 13.36--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------What I take away from these numbers is:1) Teachers and Administrators receive compenstaion that is comparable to other public service employees.2) There is an excessive amount of administration. According to the ratios, teachers receive as much supervision from administrators as students receive from teachers.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Links:WCPSS 2004-2005 Budgethttp://www.wcpss.net/budget/2004-05-official-budget/2004-05-official-budget.pdf2004-2005 NC Public Schools Salary Schedulehttp://www.ncpublicschools.org/salary_admin/salsched04-05.pdf2006 NC State Employee Pay Schedule (for comparison to NC teachers)http://www.osp.state.nc.us/salschd/2006/salsch06.pdf2005 General Service (Federal) Pay Schedule (for comparison to NC teachers)http://www.opm.gov/oca/05tables/pdf/gs.pdf2006 Military Pay Schedule (for comparison to NC teachers)http://www.dod.mil/dfas/militarypay/newinformation/WebPayTableVersion2006updated.pdf*WTF is wrong with librarian?
6/25/2006 1:28:42 PM
6/26/2006 12:48:41 AM
6/26/2006 1:42:11 AM
6/26/2006 8:49:01 AM
6/26/2006 12:52:12 PM