Help our schools

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It's time to go get the back-to-school supplies: pencils, bags, books -- and this year, maybe some good walking shoes.

The Georgia budget is in such dire straits that school districts are taking new looks at their bus routes and whether they have to be picking up every kid they're picking up.

It's not just the high price of fuel that's inspiring the move: Gov. Sonny Perdue also has trimmed back school spending by millions -- $3.3 million in Richmond County and $2.1 million in Columbia County alone.

Even that is just a 2 percent cut -- and Perdue hit other spending harder, with 6 percent cuts in state agencies and 5 percent in Medicaid.

But the cuts, as necessary as they are, come at a time when school districts are already in the red -- in Richmond County, $13.4 million in the red, even before the latest Perdue cuts. To cover some of that, the Richmond County Board of Education recently voted to raise taxes to their maximum level. But even that didn't cover all the expected shortfall, and now the budget's been cut even more.

This year, school officials will have to be smarter and more efficient than they've been in perhaps decades.

The Richmond County Board of Education has awarded a modest $15,000 bonus to one-year Superintendent Dana Bedden, and we're all for it. He has stabilized a district that was constantly churning in turmoil under his predecessor.

Even so, Dr. Bedden can't be expected to have all the answers. And school board members ought to be humble enough to know the same about themselves.

Therefore, we suggest they seek the budget-cutting wisdom and experience of the private sector.

We encourage school officials to get the hard-won advice of area business owners and corporate managers who've been through similar tough times and have demonstrated an ability to survive and, often, to even make their companies stronger through the difficulties.

It wouldn't be a bad idea to seek that business-sector counsel in both good times and bad, either.

This isn't Bedden's or the board's problem. This is the community's problem. We need to be willing to help. And they need to be modest enough to accept it.

Comments

doubt_it

How about partnerships with private companies and nonprofits to provide various services to the school district. The first that comes to mind is the damn landscaping maintenance. These schools are an embarrassment. Other services could be provided in lieu of public relations.

lifelongresidient

dear doubt it, i know its a little late but i bet the money spent on the unneeded new laney football stadium and josey gymnasium sure could come in handy about right now.....

mgroothand

I read on-line newspapers from other cities and towns where I've lived. If there is one common denominator it is the lack of adequate school funding and the pletora of sports facilities. The obscene amounts of money spent on sports by school districts is just that, obscene. Case in point, over three years ago a high school parking lot in west Augusta was transformed into a softball field with all the special, expensive trimmings. It has been used maybe a half dozen times since. Why?

I4PUTT

Landscaping...wow that will solve the problem. I guess if it looks better the kids will learn more. Shut down school kitchens. Let the kids bring their lunch from home and eat in the cafeteria. Stop school breakfast programs now. Let parents get up with their kids and make breakfast. Stop bussing now. Parents can drop their kids off at school. Unload the fat at the BOE offices. If you're not producing, get off the pay roll. Three strikes and you're out for the year. Then you end up with the kids that want to learn. Get kicked out 2 years in a row and you're out permanently. Free education is a wonderful thing to receive. Earn the right to be there.

jack

Maybw back to the three Rs without all the frills would be a good start.. I did get lunch at school but had to pay for it and we weren't even middle class at the time financially. I walked to school until I went to high school and there was only one of those in the county, so caught a city bus and paid for that too. And no, sports should always take a back seat to education.

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