Despite repeated demands from advocates and some elected officials for “fair funding” of North Carolina charter schools, local spending in charter schools in fact exceeds that of traditional public schools, according to a new report from the NC Justice Center entitled “Fair Funding for Charter Schools: Mission Accomplished.”
...Hard work is supposed to provide the income to allow people to get by and set their children up for future success. North Carolina policymakers have violated that promise, both with their policy choices that make it more difficult for North Carolinians to connect to good jobs and with their failure to enact the policies that make sure work translates into greater economic security. The national economic recovery began in 2009, but it has yet to reach North Carolinians across the state. Too many workers have failed to find work or left the labor market for lack of jobs in their community. Far too many who are working find their wages falling short of what it takes to make ends meet and otherwise contribute to their communities’ improvement.
...Public education is on the front burner of the public policy debate these days. With both the new school year and the 2016 election campaign now in full swing, all sorts of numbers and claims are being thrown around by advocates, candidates elected officials.
Fortunately, experts in the North Carolina Justice Center’s Education and Law and Budget and Tax Center projects have prepared the following two, “just the facts” essays that lay out the hard data in simple, easy-to-understand language.
...It’s an article of faith on the modern American Right that America’s “war on poverty” is a lost and hopeless cause. For decades now, conservative politicians and commentators have been churning out essays and speeches in which they claim that public safety net programs are useless. Some even go so far as to accuse safety net spending proponents of fraud by claiming that the real purpose of such programs is to make politicians look as if they’re as if they’re helping the poor even when they really don’t.
...Alexandra Sirota, Director of the North Carolina Budget and Tax Center, has authored a new and damning new report about the cumulative impact of the tax cuts and tax shifts enacted by the state’s conservative political leaders in recent years. The report, “The road to nowhere good for North Carolina,” provides a powerful and easy-to-digest critique of the ongoing ideologically-driven efforts to phase out North Carolina’s corporate and personal income taxes – a plan sometimes referred to as the “road to zero.”
...The failure to enact a robust state minimum wage and a lack of income growth for most workers are leaving far too many North Carolinians struggling to get by. According to an analysis conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than 120,000 North Carolinians earned at or below the minimum wage last year, an increase of more than two and half times from several years ago.
...It’s been nearly two weeks since Governor McCrory signed the 2017 state budget into law and most North Carolinians can probably be forgiven if they haven’t given the matter a whole of lot of thought in the interim. Fortunately, however, some people have been giving the matter a lot of thought and consideration – most notably, the experts at the North Carolina Budget and Tax Center. While many others have been enjoying vacations and a break from the Legislative Building wars, BTC analysts have been poring through the details, crunching the numbers, developing projections and comparisons, uncovering hidden policy decisions and just generally getting a complete handle on what it is that state leaders have left us with.
...[Editor’s note: North Carolina’s conservative elected leaders have changed their tune in recent months. After railing for years about “runaway spending” and having slashed state budget appropriations in virtually every area of government service, this year – an important election year – officials have suddenly started bragging about teacher pay raises and other efforts to boost essential services like mental health programs.
...Today (May 20,2016), HRC, Equality North Carolina and the National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) sent a letter to Charlotte Mayor Jennifer Roberts and the seven City Council members who voted to advance city-wide LGBT non-discrimination protections on February 22, 2016. The letter comes amid reports of a possible deal on HB2 that could potentially involve repealing the city’s non-discrimination ordinance. The Councilmembers who voted in favor of these crucial protections were: Julie Eiselt, James Mitchell, Al Austin, Patsy Kinsey, John Autry, LaWana Mayfield and Vi Lyles.
...8—percentage by which inflation-adjusted U.S. median incomes fell between 1999 and 2014 (Pew Research Center “America’s Shrinking Middle Class: A Close Look at Changes Within Metropolitan Areas,” May 11, 2016) 61—percentage of Americans who were middle class in 1971 (Ibid.) 50—percentage in 2015 (Ibid.)
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