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SEQUENCE:18704535
CREATED:20100304T061700Z
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 http://digitaldaq.deviantart.com/gallery/\n\nhttp://www.facebook.com/david.quinley?ref=mf\n\nhttp://twitter.com/davidaquinley\n\nfor 
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 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/03/03/18639515.php
SUMMARY:NOVATO HANDING OUT FLYERS AS PART OF STATE PROTEST OF ED. CUTS AT K-12+COM +other Ca. Sch.
LOCATION:Novato teachers to protest state cuts Thursday\nRob 
 Rogers\nIJ\n\n\n\nNovato teachers plan to hand out flyers during Thursday's 
 statewide "Day of Action," protesting the $2.5 billion in cuts to education 
 proposed in Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's latest budget.\n\n"Our building 
 reps are going to distribute to colleagues a half-page flyer, advising 
 parents who they can contact and what's going on at the state," said 
 Beverly Winsor, office manager for the Novato Federation of 
 Teachers.\n\nWhile teachers and parents throughout the state are hosting 
 rallies, teach-ins and town hall meetings, Marin educators said they were 
 urging supporters to attend a 5 p.m. rally at San Francisco's Civic 
 Center.\n\n"We'll have no official on-campus activity, but we've informed 
 our members of the rallies and speakers who will be in San Francisco," said 
 Ira Lansing, president of the faculty union at the College of Marin, which 
 has lost $356,000 in state revenue during the past year.\n\nSupporters of 
 the event said they hope it will draw attention to the extent of the 
 state's cuts to education. In the past week, the San Rafael Board of 
 Education - faced with a $1.4 million deficit - approved sending 26 layoff 
 notices to teachers, while the board of the Novato Unified School District, 
 hit with a $2.6 million shortfall, approved 14 layoff notices to teachers 
 and is considering closing one or more of the district's schools.\n\n"This 
 is all about teachers, students and parents fighting and acknowledging the 
 massive impacts of the state cutting $17 billion over the 
 last\nAdvertisement\nMarin Sonoma Deconstruction & Demolition Services\ntwo 
 years," said Mike Myslinski of the California Teachers Association. "The 
 governor wants to cut another $2.5 billion and renege on his agreement to 
 pay the schools back $11 billion. Public schools cannot take any more 
 hits."\n\nRepresentatives from Schwarzenegger's office did not return calls 
 Monday. Organizers of Thursday's protests say the cuts in Schwarzenegger's 
 January budget proposal will lead to further layoffs, furloughs and fee 
 increases that will damage the state's ability to provide an effective 
 education for its children.\n\n"We're now $2,000 below the national average 
 in per-pupil spending for grades K-12," said Fred Glass, a spokesman for 
 the California Federation of Teachers. "Student fees are skyrocketing in 
 our formerly free higher education system, pricing out working families and 
 destroying the promise of public higher education for California 
 residents."\n\nSeveral supporters of the protest have called either for new 
 taxes to support education, or changes to the state constitution that would 
 make it easier to pass a tax issue. Sen. Mark Leno said he's pushing a bill 
 that would reauthorize the vehicle license tax Schwarzenegger eliminated in 
 2003 - but place the funds it generated in the hands of county 
 governments.\n\n"That would be significant amounts of money that county 
 boards could decide for themselves how to appropriate, once voters approved 
 it," said Leno, D-San Francisco, who said he was "concerned" about the 
 governor's proposed cuts. "We are in the process of destroying what was the 
 greatest higher educational system the world had ever seen."
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/03/03/18639515.php
DTSTART:20100304T160000Z
DTEND:20100305T040000Z
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