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View Full Version : Teachers unions cash in at expense of food stamp recipients




bobbyw24
08-10-2010, 05:02 AM
House
members return to Washington this week for a special session that will include a vote on a $26.1 billion spending package intended partially to keep states from laying off teachers, a move some critics have called a “bailout for teachers unions.”

The Senate last week passed their own version of the bill, which cuts $12 billion beginning in 2014 from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance, or “food stamps,” program to help make the measure deficit neutral. Anti-hunger advocates and conservatives alike decried the move.

“We’re taking money from feeding poor kids so middle class teachers don’t have to look for jobs,” said Frederick M. Hess, director of the Education Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank.

The bill has spawned criticism from poverty issue advocates as well, who have voiced dissent over the depletion of funding for the food stamp program.

“The bill, if enacted, will do far more harm than good,” said Jim Weill, president of the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC), a non-profit group that focuses on hunger issues. “FRAC urges the House of Representatives to reject the Senate bill and move quickly to pass its version of Child Nutrition Reauthorization.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that more than 40 million Americans currently use food stamps, a number they predict will increase by nearly three million within the next year.

Some House Democrats have said they will seek a way to pass a House version with the food stamps funding in tact or try to reinstate it later. Michael Mershon, a spokesman for Massachusetts Democratic Rep. James McGovern, told the Hill the congressman is “considering legislation to restore the cuts while finding another offset.”

The pending House bill, which also includes $16 billion for Medicaid programs in the states, includes no requirements that school districts balance their budgets or report on whether the money is making a measurable effect in the classroom. Support for the bill has mainly been driven by the Federation for American Teachers, the largest group that represents teachers’ interests, which has donated more than $1.7 million to Democrats in 2010.

“It’s a wheel barrel of cash,” said Hess, adding that the infusion of money into the districts could only make it harder on local leaders to fix their budgets.

“It’s going to strip political cover from the superintendents and school boards that are trying to convince people that have to make hard decisions,” he said. “When the teachers union and advocacy groups can say ‘what a minute, why don’t you just go to DC and get some more?’ You now sound like the bad guy instead of the responsible steward.”

Education Secretary Arne Duncan defended the bill Monday, which President Obama is expected to sign.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2010/08/10/teachers-unions-cash-in-at-expense-of-food-stamp-recipients/#ixzz0wCSq2RNO

squarepusher
08-10-2010, 05:09 AM
not my SNAPS!

jmdrake
08-10-2010, 05:39 AM
That sucks either way you go. If teachers get laid off those are more people potentially eligible for food stamps. What really has to be looked at is why we are looking at ending the wars to save money, bringing troops from bases overseas and ending all foreign aid. Also Obamacare is putting a new unfunded mandate on states so that means less money for teachers also. The federal government should end all unfunded mandates to states then the states would have more money to spend it as they choose.

Stary Hickory
08-10-2010, 07:01 AM
I look forward to the day when teacher's unions get theirs and quit fleecing America and using our children as a human shield to do it. They are the worst of the worst.

Elwar
08-10-2010, 07:10 AM
Teachers Unions cash in at expense of taxpayers.

sevin
08-10-2010, 07:39 AM
"When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." - Benjamin Franklin

brenden.b
08-10-2010, 07:54 AM
So, I just called my Congressman, Bart Stupak, a Democrat, and asked that he vote "NO" on this bill, and the clerk repeated my request and called it the "teacher bailout"!

At least the clerk is being honest about the intentions of this bill!

If anyone has free time this morning, consider calling your Congressman and asking them to vote "NO" on this bill. It is HR 1586.

YumYum
08-10-2010, 08:10 AM
Every little bit helps bring the day of reckoning.