鈥淔riends! Romans! Countrymen! We desperately need to lift our public schools and our namesake university into the 21st century. will do this by a teensy little increase of half a percent to our general excise tax, and by establishing two special funds for the Department of Education and the University of Hawaii that will give a dedicated funding source for these fine departments charged with the heavy responsibility of educating our students. Isn鈥檛 that a small price to ask for the future of our keiki?鈥

That speech was made up, but the bill was not. The speech is a summary of what many of the bill鈥檚 supporters are testifying in support of it. As of this writing, the bill is very much alive and headed over from the Senate to the House of Representatives.

There鈥檚 no mistaking that we have problems in our school system. When school officials are reduced to going to their local neighborhood boards to beg for spare change to buy pencils when the overall budget of the Department of Education is in the billions of dollars, something is seriously wrong with the system we now have.

McKinley High School faculty/teachers hold signs along King Street. 7 march 2017
McKinley High School faculty holding signs along King Street in 2017 Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Why is it that the multiple management layers that stand between the appropriated king鈥檚 ransom and the classrooms allow so little to filter through?

And why aren鈥檛 we making the effort to pull down available federal funds, ? Shouldn鈥檛 we be trying to address these problems before putting an even heavier monkey on the backs of our working families?

(And, make no mistake, this monkey weighs more heavily on those least able to afford it. We and others have written on several occasions that the GET is regressive, meaning that those with the least ability to pay are hurt the most.)

Red Herring

Can the life of our teachers and professors be improved with a 鈥渄edicated funding source鈥? That argument is a smelly red herring.

As we said during the debate over the failed constitutional amendment to surcharge real property taxes, our educational institutions already receive a ton of general fund money. Adding a special fund won鈥檛 and can鈥檛 prevent either this or a future legislature from redirecting those general fund moneys to other pressing needs.

Floods on Kauai? Lava devastation on the Big Island? Money for relief from those natural disasters has to come from somewhere. And then there are the other problems like cost of living, the homeless, invasive species, and the list goes on

鈥淭his fix will not be easy. There will be pain.鈥

Big, fat special funds would make oversight of how the money is spent tougher and would lessen accountability even more.

And, as we wrote about before, for more than 20 years our legislature shoveled $90 million a year into an 鈥渆ducational facilities special fund.鈥 That fund was in existence between 1990 and 2013.

At the beginning of this year, DOE鈥檚 maintenance backlog a whopping $868 million, while that of UH wasn鈥檛 far behind with $722 million.

Did the backlog swell to that level in just the last 5-6 years? If not, let鈥檚 stop thinking that a special fund will be a cure-all.

Instead, what we really need to do is fix the inefficiency 鈥 whatever is causing the 鈥渢rickle-out economics鈥 that causes the staggering sums our legislature throws at our educational institutions to be reduced to peanuts by the time it reaches the classrooms.

This fix will not be easy. There will be pain. Those whose actions have caused or perpetuated these disasters deserve some head-rolling, and hopefully some of that will happen.

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