Dealing with
the budget, so far legislators have shown a marked preference for accepting
agency spending demands and then seeking revenues to match, rather than taking
the more sensible approach of systemic restructuring focusing on efficiency
of spending tax dollars. No category has reflected this approach more faithfully
than higher education, where the path of least resistance to lawmakers but
of most injury to the citizenry, thoughtless
tax increases, has become almost reflexive even among even some
Republicans who insist they are conservatives that profess belief in right-sizing
government – apparently not just right now nor right here.
In part this
instinct has emerged because of elections scheduled this fall. Many
politicians who claim to be principled really have feet of clay, whose core
beliefs are inherently weak thus rather than lead and persuade voters of
the rectitude of these instead these get treated as flags of convenience,
lowered out of fear of vocal special interests amplified in a hostile media
environment. From a reformer’s perspective, the good news is these
spineless posers, when the winds change that make them perceive themselves
out of danger of losing their offices (if they manage reelection despite their
tax-friendly attitudes), will rediscover their courage and raise their
flags to catch this breeze of fiscal responsibility, at least until the
next time courage is needed.
But also working
against spending reform on this particular issue is that it will be a long
process the benefits of which will not come to fruition and become voluminous
until years from now. Immediate savings that require a lot of heavy lifting
in policy changes are too few to help solve a difficult budget situation –
magnified when the policy-makers are part-timers who meet to decide for
just one-eighth of the year. In these instances, politicians instinctively
gravitate towards stopgap measures unless leadership impels them towards
the more sensible long-term solutions.
Hopefully,
that impetus is on the way. One persistent
legislative voice for spending reform in higher education whose words
on this have been washed away this year by the general tax-hiking flood and
likely will return for another term is the chairman of the Senate Education
Committee Conrad Appel. The three announced
Republican candidates for governor also appear open to providing such
direction. They have much on the side of spending reform.
It’s not that
Louisiana spends too little public money on higher education – among the
states and the District of Columbia it ranked
28th in such per capita
such spending in 2014, appropriate to the state’s ranking 30th
in personal per capita income,
and the budget proposed for fiscal year 2016 would spend about at that
level – but that it does so inefficiently, by having an imbalance of
senior-to-junior institution students with too many baccalaureate-and-above
institutions chasing too few students, taxpayers disproportionately footing
the bill with students not paying their fair shares, and institutions not
compelled to spend wisely, in some cases because of plentiful bong hits of
taxpayer money from the state’s open-ended entitlement program that pays tuition
for minimal academic achievement, the Taylor Opportunity Program for
Students.
And, if
anything, the environment for reform could deteriorate this session. While
Appel and fellow Republican Sen. Jack
Donahue have a bill out there to rein in TOPS spending to make it more like
a genuine scholarship program, another bill aimed at giving institutions
the ability to control their own tuition had a poison
pill added that would encourage the lowering of admission standards and
therefore multiply wasteful spending as schools then would be encouraged to
engage in a race to the bottom that would create even more imbalance in enrollment
at four-year rather than two-year schools. Worse, Democrat state Rep. Walt Leger’s
HB 323
would amend the Constitution to lock in, requiring a supermajority to
override, state taxpayers’ present level of subsidization to higher
education adding even more rigidity to the budget that has been blamed for
the current difficulties in achieving balance in it and therefore promoting
tax increases over spending reform.
Let’s hope the
ability for schools to set their own tuition does not get subverted by
lowering standards and mooted as a method to induce efficiency in both structure
and processes of higher education delivery by dedicating roughly another six
percent to the 81 percent of state funds already non-discretionary. If
these things do happen, then Louisiana may be stuck permanently with an underperforming,
inefficient system bleeding taxpayers needlessly beyond any reform hopes of
the future.
"Efficiency" in Jindal parlance means how many jobs can be eliminated, and how many public services can be sold to private companies, using public moneys as incentive.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteI see your guy Jindal is now using public money, public facilities and public employees to issue obvious federal campaign statements.
Defend that!!!!
Unfortunately we see me, me me as an argument to additionally fund LA education.
ReplyDeleteAlthough the word student was in his blog, no where did he mention the only thing that matters in education: Sustained, Advanced, Student Success Outcomes, leading to ongoing, successful,student employment in the students chosen field of study, to become and continue to be a productive member of society
And we wonder why traditional education doesn't get reformed....Its because of traditional education naysayers and feet draggers...go figure