Governor Jerry Brown frequently touts his record of putting our children’s education first. During his campaign and on his website he boasts about increasing educational funding and establishing charter schools. That is why Californian’s should be appalled by his decision to hold K-12 education hostage in an attempt to fix California’s $9.2 billion budget deficit.
This dangerous game of chicken wrongfully relies on the voters approving $7 billion in temporary tax increases in November or three weeks will be slashed from the K-12 school year. Threatening to cheat our children of their educational future is not the way to ensure that the Governor gets the tax hikes he wants.
Instead of endangering educational funding, Brown’s administration should look at total state spending and prioritize spending based on actual outcomes. This is not something that is a new concept to the California legislature.
In fact, this past fall, the California legislature unanimously passed a bill that would open the door to performance-based budgeting. This bill would have required state agencies and departments to develop annual “goals, target outcomes, and performance data” to be submitted with their regular budget requests. The intended result would have enabled Gov. Brown and the legislature to better determine spending priorities based upon actual performance outcome data. This new budget system would provide legislators the opportunity to make more informed decisions about allocating limited resources. However, Gov. Brown vetoed the legislation and allowed California’s budget to continue down the rabbit hole of debt.


