No more public school furloughs

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Updated: 5/25/2010 7:37 pm
Governor Linda Lingle announced an agreement that will keep Hawaii’s public school children in their classrooms next school year.

Following a stalemate with education officials over the cost, the governor said it was time to make a deal.

Lingle, Board of Education Chairman Garrett Toguchi, and Department of Education interim Superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi announced today all 17 "Furlough Fridays" scheduled for the upcoming 2010-2011 school year will be eliminated from the public school calendar.

That means nearly 171,000 children will return to the classroom.

The agreement was made possible due to a unique three-way public-private partnership between the State, teachers and the major banks in Hawai‘i.  

The plan calls for use of $57.2 million from the Hurricane Relief Fund, $2.2 million in federal funds, and six planning days the teachers have agreed to give back to the state.

A $10 million line of credit from local banks is also available if needed.

“I am happy to announce that furloughs are over and children will be able to return to the classroom for the entire upcoming school year.  We have been able to do this without laying off teachers, increasing the size of classes, raising taxes, or adversely impacting the State budget,” Governor Lingle said.  “I am particularly proud that the major banks in our state stepped up and offered a line of credit that will give the Department of Education access to additional funds, if needed, to help end the furloughs.”

“On behalf of our teachers, principals, school officials and support staff, I am pleased we were able to reach this agreement today and allow teachers to start their summer recess knowing instructional time has been restored,” said Interim Superintendent Matayoshi.

“Students, administrators, teachers, staff and parents ought to be commended for being resilient, keeping their heads high and doing everything they could to weather a difficult academic year,” said Board of Education Chairperson Toguchi. “While we worked hard to avoid and end furloughs in the past year, I’m glad funding has now been approved to support the supplemental agreement reached between the Board of Education and the Hawai‘i State Teachers Association, giving back to students all the days they deserve to be in school.”

“Although furloughs are behind us now, improving public education is a never-ending task, and our continued support will be critical to keep student achievement rising and to prepare graduates for college and careers,” Toguchi added.

Earlier in the day Governor Lingle signed Act 143 (SB2124 SD2 HD1 CD1) which makes $67 million available from the State Hurricane Relief Fund to restore instructional days.  

Governor Lingle has pledged to release $57.2 million appropriated under this act to restore 11 of the 17 furlough days.

Teachers, through a supplemental agreement signed by the Hawai‘i State Teachers Association and the Board of Education, have agreed to give up six paid teacher planning days.

Because the Department of Education has said it may need additional funding beyond the $57.2 million from the Hurricane Relief Fund and $2.2 million in federal funds the Governor has pledged to release, a group of local banks has agreed to provide a line of credit of up to $10 million to assist the department if necessary.  The line of credit has no upfront costs and the banks have generously offered to give back all interest costs.

“Hawai‘i’s banking community is pleased to partner with the Governor, Legislature and the DOE/BOE in putting our students first and closing the chapter on Furlough Fridays," stated Don Horner, chairman and CEO of First Hawaiian Bank.

The Board and Department of Education will now begin its work to finalize the official calendar for the 2010-2011 school year.

In addition to the hurricane relief money, Governor Lingle has pledged to release up to $2.2 million in federal State Fiscal Stabilization Funds to make certain charter school students also have a full school year. The money is from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Part B funds, which governors have discretion over how to use.  Governor Lingle has elected to dedicate all of the Part B funds toward improving the quality of public education.

“While most of the 31 charter schools managed to find innovative ways to minimize the impact of furloughs, including 17 charter schools that did not take any furlough days, they should not be penalized and need extra funds to avoid furloughs in the coming school year,” Lt. Governor James R. “Duke” Aiona, Jr. said.

The money appropriated from the Hurricane Relief Fund does not become available until July 1, 2010 and the law requires any unused amount to be returned back to the hurricane fund.   Because money in the Hurricane Relief Fund is invested, the Administration will work with the Department of Education to make money from the fund available in a manner that does not adversely impact the fund’s interest earnings.

“We recognize that this has been a very difficult time for our state, including our students, teachers and other school employees, parents and the general community,” said Governor Lingle.  “I appreciate the public’s patience as we worked to return students to the classroom without creating a budget deficit.”  

“At this time, our focus is to look forward to ensure all Hawai‘i students get the most out of their time in the classroom by working together to improve the overall quality of education,” the Governor added.



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metacognition - 6/25/2010 1:43 AM
A public education does not cost the same as a private education. All children are not equal--regular education students cost the system far less than 15,000 per year. Fifteen percent of students receiving public education are special needs children--some of whom cost north of 100,000 (one teacher, an aide, social worker, speech therapist, etc. Granted, there may be several children in a classroom--but we do have students who have severe disabilities who need very specialized services. Also, DOE must pay for students to attend private special needs schools (such as Assets) if it can be shown that DOE does not have the specialized program. If this is a neighbor island child, throw in air fare (daily) and taxi--so the regualr education student does not receive anywhere near 15,000 worth of services. I wish the media would do a report and really open the public's eyes to where the money goes. (There is also huge waste in the upper levels--DOE suffers from nepotism and cronyism also).

Aikea - 5/26/2010 3:47 PM
Reason Why we need a school budget AUDIT.

keepithonest - 5/26/2010 3:04 PM
If tax payers spend 15k per public school student...for 2k more they could be getting a Punahou education...why is it that parent coalition is only now figthing to end furloughs???Why aren't they questioning why Hawaii public schools do not rank nationaly on the higher end rather than the lower end...we have smart kids in this state!!They deserve better!!!..

keepithonest - 5/26/2010 3:01 PM
My only point is that I don't mind paying for public eduacation as long as its a quality education. Right now the amount of money it cost us (private/public school parent) to pay for each child that goes to public school is equivalent or more than the money we spend on private education...I think we should be arguing about quality not 17 days of poor quality. I think public school students deserve a quality education just as much as those who pay for private school!!!

Aikea - 5/26/2010 2:38 PM
What about those who send their children to Private Schools? They also are paying for students to go to public schools. It is by choice they are fortunate to send their children to private schools. They pay State Taxes just as well as those parents who send their children to public schools.

keepithonest - 5/26/2010 12:43 AM
This sounds like a bandaid on wound that won't heal on a year! Let us pray that we don't need that hurricane money anytime soon! Now what really got fixed? Our kids go back to a public school system that will teach them nothing on those 17 days...best we send our kids to private school at least they know how to manage the budgets that they have. Tax payer spend thousands per child in the public school system...great price if they were getting an education worth thousands of dollars....

Aikea - 5/25/2010 11:16 PM
Who paying back the ten million bank loan once used? I am sure it will be paid back in interest.

yodagray - 5/25/2010 7:37 PM
I think this is a bad idea. What happens in the future when there isn't any more hurricane money to "borrow"? You can't get out of debt by spending more money, people needed to be laid off. I think the furlough Fridays was a good idea. Too many whining people forget that taxes come from all of us working people, the economy is poor and therefore taxes and spending need to be lowered until the economy gets better and there is more money. The government is not listening to the people, because I personally hear alot of anger from people on how the government is spending and not listening. Things don't have to change, they will, just look at history.

ROYGBIV - 5/25/2010 7:33 PM
Yep - I agree. Teachers get months of pay without having to wor and I've always been told that teachers are teachers because they love what they do - so if that's the case then why not put in a few more days a year???? But with that aside, yes, what happens now when we get hit with a hurricane. Will we be camping out on Linda's front porch? ...And notice I said WHEN and not IF. People in Hawaii are not prepared for a hurricane, especially the elderly.. What about taking a look at some of the state programs that are not working - whoa - wait. I should say, that, if you really knew what was going on, doesn't make sense and are helping people rely on programs that pay them more than if they went out to get a real job..

Nanakuli Tutu - 5/25/2010 7:15 PM
No I am not satisfied! Hurricane season starts next week, and our ohana had severe damage from Iwa and Iniki. To live on Hawaiian home lands it's manditory to pay hurricane insurance for just that, a hurricane!! We do not pay our insurance to have it taken to bail the state out of a situation that never should have happened in the first place. The teachers, principals, stc. should have given up a day of pay and let the children remain in school. How long will it be before the money from the hurricane fund is replaced?

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