Archive for March 11th, 2008

Mar 11 2008

While Agencies Cut, House Speaker Protects Pet Projects

While state agencies face across-the-board cuts, a handful of projects supported by House Speaker Bobby Harrell are fully funded in the $7 billion state budget plan that the full House will begin debating today.

One Harrell favorite, $30 million for research university endowed chairs, has been criticized by Gov. Mark Sanford. However, supporters say the program has jump-started automotive research in the Upstate, alternative fuels research ambition in Columbia and medical research at the Medical University of South Carolina.

Another project, an ad campaign promoting S.C. manufacturers, has featured Harrell in its commercials. A third gives tax credits for hydrogen research.

Harrell says the programs are key investments in overhauling the state’s economy that should not be cut despite flat state revenues.

“We will miss the opportunity to be on the cutting edge,” Harrell said. “South Carolina has to focus on its future.”

The House budget proposal would spend 4.5 percent less than last year, mainly due to far less one-time money available for next year.

The State

I will preface this by saying the fact that the state budget is decreasing by four and a half percent is pretty damn remarkable because you almost never hear about a state’s budget decreasing from the prior year. They are always going up.

Having bestowed that flattery upon our ordinarily paltry politicians, the money that is left in the budget should be prioritized better. Where is the audit that shows unequivocally that the research resulting from the endowed chairs is producing a result that outweighs the investment? Where is the proof that running ads with Harrell’s face is actually increasing the revenue to our state’s manufacturers, thus producing additional state tax revenue that out paces the tax dollars that first went out to promote the businesses in the first place? What are the results of the hydrogen research and how has it benefited South Carolina economically? These are the questions that need to be answered and it does not appear that Harrell is prepared to do so.

Governor Sanford is in the right to be asking these questions.

No responses yet

Mar 11 2008

CMS Wants $28 Million More from County Taxpayers

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools needs $28.4 million more from the county to cover enrollment growth and rising costs in 2008-09, district leaders say.

Deputy Superintendent Maurice Green will present a $1.2 billion budget plan to the school board later tonight, after a long public hearing and debate on the district’s controversial bullying policy. The meeting, which is televised live on CMS-TV Cable 3, began at 6 p.m.

With recession looming, Green and Superintendent Peter Gorman say they won’t seek extra money for new programs this year.

“We understand the overarching challenge that the economy brings to folks,” Gorman said in an interview before the school board meeting. “This is not a budget that has huge numbers of new initiatives.”

The spending plan includes a request for $369.8 million from county commissioners, an 8 percent increase over the current year. Enrollment is expected to grow by less than 3 percent, while the total budget (including state and federal money) grows by 4 percent.

Charlotte Observer

Whoa! Hold everything! An 8 percent increase over last year? Is this not the same school district that last year was drastically off their projected enrollment and ended up receiving about $21 million more than they needed? Now they are claiming they need over $28 million more for the 2008-09 school year? They way I see it, they are saying they need to spend $49 million more next year over this year since they already have all that extra money. Where is it all going? The kids at CMS certainly aren’t learning anything. The district has not improved since Gorman took over. In some respects it’s gotten worse.

Something isn’t right. I don’t see how the budget for just the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School system can be one-seventh of the budget for the entire State of South Carolina.

No responses yet