LANSING, Mich. (AP) School advocates and Democratic Gov.
Jennifer Granholm are keeping the pressure on Michigan lawmakers to
raise more money for education.
Hundreds of students, parents and school officials rallied
Tuesday at the state Capitol to take their message directly to
lawmakers. Students called on the Legislature to avoid budget cuts
that could trim school programs across the state.
''We want to show them it's hurting us more than they think it
is,'' said Zane Thomas, 17, a student at Thurston High School in
Redford near Detroit. ''I don't think they understand how deep
these cuts really are.''
Thomas said he is worried about potential cuts to drama, choir,
band and freshmen athletics programs.
Students from Grand Ledge said they are worried about possible
cuts to transportation, an alternative high school and elementary
schools.
''What's happening is not fair to anybody,'' said Alexis Miller,
15, a high school student in the district located west of Lansing.
Granholm visited Mason, about 15 miles south of Lansing, on
Tuesday for another of her roundtable discussions with educators
about school funding cuts. Granholm called on the Senate to
immediately act to avoid cuts that she recently ordered because of
falling tax revenues the fallout of Michigan's lingering economic
troubles.
The governor said lawmakers could avoid the cuts by eliminating
a scheduled inflationary increase in the state income tax personal
exemption or scaling back some exemptions on taxes affecting oil,
gas and tobacco companies.
''I certainly don't want to cut public education,'' Granholm
told reporters after speaking to Ingham County educators. ''If I
had my druthers, I certainly wouldn't be raising revenue either.
But here we are in a situation where Michigan is facing the
biggest, historic economic transformation that it has ever
experienced. The biggest crisis in manufacturing. So we don't have
enough money in the bank.''
Republicans counter that Granholm is making unnecessary cuts to
try and force them into approving a tax increase.
School funding will be cut by $127 per student in December a
total of about $212 million unless state lawmakers agree this
month to raise taxes or set aside more revenue for education. The
cut would come on top of a budget bill signed into law last month
that slashes school funding by the equivalent of $165 per student.
Schools that got last year's minimum of $7,316 per student face
combined cuts of $292 per student, or about 4 percent.
Thirty-nine of the state's better-funded districts face an
additional $52 million in cuts starting with payments later this
month. Those districts some of which now get more than $11,000
per student could face combined cuts of more than $600 per
student from last year's levels.
The Democrat-led House last week passed a bill that would use
more federal stimulus money to reduce the amount of the cuts. The
proposal, which would speed up the use of $184 million in stimulus
money that is supposed to be saved for next year, has run into
opposition in the Republican-led Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop said the proposal would
create a ''gigantic'' hole in the next state budget. The Senate has
made proposals to restore some school funding in exchange for some
business tax changes, but Democrats don't like their ideas.
''We cannot in this state continue to use our MasterCard to pay
our Visa,'' Bishop said. ''We've had a 30 percent reduction in
state revenues in the past year alone in the state general fund. We
cannot afford the budget that we have. We cannot afford the
government that we have.''
Bishop called on Granholm to rescind her recently ordered school
budget cuts.
Associated Press Writer David Eggert contributed to this
report.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)