Democratic pollster Dean Debnam of Public Policy Polling is behind a new TV ad criticizing the neighborhood school candidates in the heated race for Wake County School Board.
Debnam, who owns the Democratic polling firm, said he formed Wake Citizens for Good Government to counter what he called Republican "lies" about the school system, T. Keung Hui reports on his WakeEd blog.
He said his ad was not done in coordination with any candidates. Debnam said his company has been doing polling in the school board districts. But he said the data was for internal use and not as a public poll.
You can soon say goodbye to the Children's PAC.
Leaders of the group have notified the Wake County Board of Elections that they're shutting down the political action committee, reports Keung Hui. Dana Cope, who founded the group following this year's contentious student reassignment fight, says they've decided to work with the Wake Schools Community Alliance.
Cope, who is also executive director of the State Employees Association of N.C., says they'll officially announce next week that they're endorsing the same school board candidates as the WSCA. He said individual members of the soon-to-be-former PAC have been and will continue to raise money for candidates.
"It doesn't quite make sense to replicate a web site, to replicate a fundraising arm," Cope said. "Why don't we just support what's already in place?"
Cope said they formed the group with the plan on being independent. There was talk of raising $100,000 by getting $1,000 from 1,000 people.
Even though the group hadn't filed anything since the initial organization report, Cope said three people in the Bleinheim Woods area of Raleigh have already held fundraisers.
The higher number of students in class and the cut in teacher assistants will make up $21.7 million in discretionary cuts out of a $35.1 million overall reduction in state funding to Wake, the state's largest school district.
School officials accuse state leaders of dumping responsibility for the cuts on local districts to make them take the blame for unpopular choices.
"They knew class sizes had to go up," said school board member Lori Millberg. "They're passing the buck."
The recently adopted state budget has $225 million in cuts in K-12 education funding, leaving the specific cuts up to local school districts.
But Wake school leaders complained that those cuts weren't as discretionary as legislators have made it appear.
David Neter, Wake's chief business officer, said that until a few weeks ago, state budget writers were calling for raising class sizes in grades 4 through 12 by two students and reducing money for teacher assistants. He told school board members that while those specific details are not in the final budget, the same amount of money is being eliminated and forcing local school systems to raise class sizes and eliminate teacher assistants anyway.
Lawmakers and the state teacher lobby say school systems can tap into millions of federal stimulus dollars — $43 million in Wake's case — to avoid classroom cuts.
Though school officials are using federal stimulus money to save some existing positions, much of it is being used to create new jobs such as math coaches at elementary schools and additional pre-kindergarten teachers that officials say they can afford to lose when the stimulus money runs out in two years. (N&O)
The Wake County school system could regret making a new enemy in Dana Cope.
Cope, the executive director of the State Employees Association of North Carolina, is not happy that his children are among those who face being reassigned from Lacy Elementary School to Stough Elementary School.
He said a new group called the Children's PAC will be formed to help elect school board candidates "who will listen to the facts" and not make "politically expedient decisions."
More after the jump.