'Disgraceful': GOP Advances Bill That Could Remove 220,000 Teachers From Classrooms

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House Democrats warned that hundreds of thousands of teachers could lose their jobs if legislation advanced Friday by a Republican-controlled appropriations subcommittee becomes law.

The panel's draft Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies funding bill for the coming fiscal year calls for nearly $64 billion in total cuts, a proposal that Democrats said "decimates support for children in K-12 elementary schools and early childhood education" and "abandons college students and low-income workers trying to improve their lives through higher education or job training."

The nonprofit Committee for Education Funding noted that the Republican proposal would impact "virtually all" education programs, hitting teacher funding, student aid, and more. The bill, one of a dozen appropriations measures that Congress is looking to pass by the end of September, would bring Department of Education funding to below the 2006 level, according to the group.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, said Friday that "we are witnessing a widespread attack on public education that should shock every American family."

"If left to their own devices," DeLauro added, "Republicans would gleefully take public education to the graveyard."

The GOP legislation would slash Title I grants to local educational agencies that serve children from low-income families by nearly $15 billion compared to fiscal year 2023 levels. Appropriations Committee Democrats said the massive cut "could force a nationwide reduction of 220,000 teachers from classrooms serving low-income students" amid a teacher shortage.

The legislation would also completely eliminate funding for a number of Education Department programs, including Federal Work-Study, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, Promise Neighborhoods, and Child Care Access Means Parents in School.

"Disgraceful to say the least," Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) tweeted in response to the GOP measure.

Additionally, the bill would inflict major cuts to labor, health, and medical research programs and agencies, slashing the Occupational Safety and Health Administration by $95 million, Job Corps by $1.8 billion, the National Institutes of Health by $2.8 billion, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by $1.6 billion.

The bill would zero out funding for the CDC's Firearm Injury and Mortality Prevention Research. There have been at least 377 mass shootings across the U.S. this year.

The American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the second-largest teacher's union in the U.S., expressed outrage over the GOP funding measure's "deep cuts to education, healthcare, and worker programs."

"At the same time, another GOP-led committee is advancing bills to extend tax cuts for the rich," the union wrote, referring to the House Ways and Means Committee, which recently approved a tax-cut package that would disproportionately benefit large corporations and the top 1%.

"Their values are showing—and they're not pretty," AFT added.

The proposed funding cuts for labor, health, education, and related agencies are part of the GOP's far-reaching assault on federal programs as members of Congress race to approve a dozen appropriations bills by September 30—the end of the current fiscal year—to avert a government shutdown.

The debt ceiling agreement reached in late May by the Biden White House and Republican leaders set caps on non-military discretionary outlays, but GOP appropriators are working to cut spending as much as possible, targeting clean water funds, IRS enforcement, public housing, and other critical programs.
 
Given how scores have slumped since 2020, clearly we don't need the dead weight.
The debt ceiling agreement reached in late May by the Biden White House and Republican leaders set caps on non-military discretionary outlays, but GOP appropriators are working to cut spending as much as possible, targeting clean water funds, IRS enforcement, public housing, and other critical programs.
Why can't states fund clean water or public housing? Are state employee pensions that important?

I understand defunding IRS enforcement, though. The IRS is evil.
 
Public schooling is an utter sham at this point. The whole molly-coddling of niggers has proved disastrous. Subjects have been dumbed down for them but even that wasn't enough to uplift them. Shit like common core was made to 'help' with the problem by retarding kids that would otherwise excel at it.

And then there's the whole faggotry and troondom being shoved into the brains of kids. Its gone making someone stupid, it also is out to make them gay too.
 
The panel's draft Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies funding bill for the coming fiscal year calls for nearly $64 billion in total cuts, a proposal that Democrats said "decimates support for children in K-12 elementary schools and early childhood education" and "abandons college students and low-income workers trying to improve their lives through higher education or job training."

The bill, one of a dozen appropriations measures that Congress is looking to pass by the end of September, would bring Department of Education funding to below the 2006 level, according to the group.
I graduated high school in 2002. My last two years, I was taking classes part time at a local community college. At the time, classes were $6 per unit hour. In %CURRENT_YEAR%, those classes are about $50 per unit hour. One of the reasons for this inflation is the amount of money the federal government gives to put students in chairs at the collegiate level. The schooling isn't going up in price because of the value of education, it's going up in price because the schools realize they have a blank check courtesy of Uncle Sam.

The GOP legislation would slash Title I grants to local educational agencies that serve children from low-income families by nearly $15 billion compared to fiscal year 2023 levels. Appropriations Committee Democrats said the massive cut "could force a nationwide reduction of 220,000 teachers from classrooms serving low-income students" amid a teacher shortage.
I don't know why they're mad about this. This will put those poor disadvantaged students in the "better" schools, and they'll surely no doubt get a quality education, unlike the one they were getting at their low-income school. I mean, I know this is all bullshit, but I'm arguing shit that they argue; all you need to do is put them in better schools and they'll succeed... right...

I would also love to see where these Title I grants go. Because if it's not into the admistrator's pockets, I'm willing to bet a lot of it goes to feeding the kids, because their parents are too fucking lazy and stupid to do so. I'm not saying the kids need to starve, but a lot of our problems with education and building a better citizen starts at home. The more you take care of their children, the more reliant they'll be on the system (because they're too fucking stupid)... and yes I know that's what they want. I'm just spelling it out that this money is a fucking scam.

and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by $1.6 billion.
It's been about 3 years since Corona and we've had massive lies from everyone in the CDC, WHO, and a several other places... and you're really gonna defend the CDC's budget?
 
As a new teacher I can firmly say the kids are our future and the future is FUCKED. Now whose to blame: Parents , the woke administration that puts in place woke discipline systems that don't work. The teachers who uncritically accept and teach out of bull shit like CRT and trans ideology. All the fucking teachers with trans ally stickers on their doors.

But beyond all that the real reason is this. We're a nation on a steep social decline.
 
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The bill would zero out funding for the CDC's Firearm Injury and Mortality Prevention Research.
I encourage everyone to look at that link and see what kind of "research" was going on there.

My favorite:
Dr. Mark Edberg and his team at the George Washington University in Washington DC will develop, implement, and evaluate a media-based youth-focused narrative intervention seeking to support the dissemination and community facilitated adoption of developmental trajectories that present viable alternatives to violence. The intervention is designed to prevent firearm violence among Black and other racial and ethnic minority youth in Wards 7 and 8 of Washington, DC which is a community with a high burden of firearm injury and mortality. This community-informed and developmentally focused approach is innovative and potentially scalable to other similar communities with a high burden of firearm violence among racial and ethnic minority youth.

"Has anyone tried just talking to them and asking them not to shoot each other? Maybe they just don't know about not shooting each other." :lol:
Good luck, guys.
 
Public schooling is an utter sham at this point. The whole molly-coddling of niggers has proved disastrous. Subjects have been dumbed down for them but even that wasn't enough to uplift them. Shit like common core was made to 'help' with the problem by retarding kids that would otherwise excel at it.
As much as the Dems are whining about these drastic cuts, their alternative of more money all the time hasn't made a difference either. If I recall, Detroit Public Schools was receiving around $12000 per pupil before their bankruptcy and the quality of education the students received certainly didn't justify the price tag to taxpayers.

My last two years, I was taking classes part time at a local community college. At the time, classes were $6 per unit hour. In %CURRENT_YEAR%, those classes are about $50 per unit hour. One of the reasons for this inflation is the amount of money the federal government gives to put students in chairs at the collegiate level. The schooling isn't going up in price because of the value of education, it's going up in price because the schools realize they have a blank check courtesy of Uncle Sam.
Tell me about it. When i considered going back to college for a second bachelor's degree, tuition was triple what it was when I originally attended and graduated debt-free. Suddenly, professional certifications became more appealing and practical.

Community colleges do provide better bang for the buck, but - as @Kheapathic stated - they aren't immune to the tuition increases that surpass inflation resulting from the vicious circle involving student debt and higher education.

This is why I'd hate to see the Work-Study program eliminated. That allowed a number of my classmates to work part-time to defray their tuition costs without going into debt.

But beyond all that the real reason is this. We're a nation on a steep social decline.
NGL, I believe we are lagging behind a lot of other first world nations now and rapidly becoming a global laughing stock when it comes to our public educational system.
 
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Community colleges do provide better bang for the buck, but - as @Kheapathic stated - they aren't immune to the tuition increases that surpass inflation resulting from the vicious circle involving student debt and higher education.
I've said it in other college related threads; but I somewhat recently took some classes at a CC. They wouldn't let me register for classes until I had FAFSA paperwork submitted. I told them I don't need government money, I'm self-funding; they pretty much told me, "That's cute, come back when your FAFSA is completed."

Bitch, I just fucking told you I'm paying for it myself! I don't need federal aid! DON'T FUCKING TELL ME I CAN'T SIT IN A FUCKING CLASSROOM BEFORE YOU FIGURE OUT WHAT UNCLE SAM IS WILLING TO FUCKING PAY FOR ME YOU USELESS ALCOHOLIC WHORE!

Okay...
 
Public school is a necessary evil. The problem is that modern day education is just taxpayer funded propaganda to promote the worst of the worst. In addition, schools are still beholden to the old practice of "Prussian Education" which was meant to train children for the factory. This is despite the fact that most jobs are in the service economy, not manual labor. As a person who recently graduated 2 years early in 2021 the future is fucked. The only people you have to blame is the parents. It's their fault that school have devolved to the point of where it's at now.
 
The GOP legislation would slash Title I grants to local educational agencies that serve children from low-income families by nearly $15 billion compared to fiscal year 2023 levels. Appropriations Committee Democrats said the massive cut "could force a nationwide reduction of 220,000 teachers from classrooms serving low-income students" amid a teacher shortage.
I wonder if the CRS has ever studied if this program even comes close to achieving any of its goals:
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I'm going to suspect not:
1689490414194.png
 
Who cares? They don't teach anything in school anyway. They get so much money the kids coming out of the places should be getting college level educations. Instead they dump all this money into the schools and it's not helping. School isn't going to make stupid people smart though. No matter what you do to it.
As a new teacher I can firmly say the kids are our future and the future is FUCKED. Now whose to blame: Parents , the woke administration that puts in place woke discipline systems that don't work. The teachers who uncritically accept and teach out of bull shit like CRT and trans ideology. All the fucking teachers with trans ally stickers on their doors.

But beyond all that the real reason is this. We're a nation on a steep social decline.
That goes hand in hand with the economic decline. As countries decline economically, they also suffer from social decline moral decline birthrates decline and health declines. It's all linked to the economic decline.
 
I didn't have an issue until they wrote this:



Cut the programs for LGBT teachers, whatever, but cuts to health and medical research will cost lives.
If anything it will SAVE lives, since the NIH helped fund the Wuhan lab and it and the CDC blew untold millions on absolute nonsense during the scamdemic, including promoting lethal vaccines and spending money on public advocacy of lockdowns and mask mandates. And it keeps going on, I mean look at the example in the article with the "Firearm Injury and Mortality Prevention Research" which is clearly just some gun grabber bullshit since we all know who does the majority of mass shootings. These bureaucracies need to be dismantled, they're almost as bad as the IRS which makes the government a few pennies (if that) on every extra dollar they take from you.
 
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