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Our first meeting was with John Kuempel. My friends took the lead on urging his support for raising teacher pay and increasing state funding for retired teachers. Kuempel was quite receptive and said he fully understood as his wife had been a public school teacher until recently and he had a very clear idea of what they do and what they deserve. I then brought up our concerns about private school vouchers and the use of tax payer money supporting religious schools. Representative Kuempel told us he was firmly against such legislation this term just as he has been in every other session of the legislature as it doesn’t make any sense for his district. He also said that he is speaking with his colleagues in the House advocating against any such bill. Needless to say we thanked him for his support and encouraged him to keep it up.
Once we made our way through the capitol building to Senator Campbell’s office we met with her staff member specializing in public education, a woman around 30. As we spoke with her about our interest in a strong public education system we learned that has two young children in Austin ISD schools and is therefore also interested in quality education. She explained that while Sen. Campbell wants to see teacher pay increased she’s unwilling to support just increasing state funding to bring the percentage of school district budgets provided by state funds back to the historical average of 50% from the current low of 41%. She told us that the senator feels that school districts can’t be trusted to spend the money on teacher salaries so instead she’ll support some form of narrowly constructed bill that forces districts to only use the money on teacher pay.
I then asked her how that reconciled with the philosophy of local control and the assumption that local school boards knew best the needs of their districts. Her defense was that school board elections are low turnout affairs and that often leads to boards which make poor decisions that aren’t truly representative of the people in the district. Rather than continue to argue this point I moved on to our view on spending taxpayer money on private school vouchers. The staff member said that Sen. Campbell is a strong supporter of vouchers and has been since first being elected as are many of her constituents. I told her that we believed that taxpayer funds should only be spent on public schools as there would be no transparency on how those funds were spent since private and religious schools don’t have publicly elected boards and aren’t required to make their budgets publicly available. We were told that Sen. Campbell didn’t share that concern.
I also brought up that private and religious schools aren’t required to meet the same standards as public schools with regard to curriculum or having students take the STAAR tests. I reminded her that private and religious schools don’t get graded by the state and are required to address poor performance like public schools are. We closed by asking that she relay our views to the Senator.
Published in the Seguin Gazette - March 22, 2023
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