The President’s budget request for 2011 includes a significant increase in funding for education -- reflecting an understanding that education fuels success for our students and for our nation.
We support the President’s effort to make college more affordable for more Americans, and the proposed investments in early childhood education.
We thank the House and Administration for focusing on the need for investments, expansion, and improvement in post-secondary education. This focus, which will help augment student access, persistence, and success in higher education, is essential to our nation's economic stability.
We also applaud the President’s efforts to revitalize community colleges, which we know are part of the road to success for many families.
We also commend the House and the Administration for supporting investments in early childhood learning, particularly the over $9 billion early childhood investments included in SAFRA.
We are also pleased that the President is proposing to increase funding for Head Start programs that provide education, health, nutrition and parental involvement services to low-income children and their families.
NEA shares the Administration’s goal of fostering innovation and reform to close the gaps in achievement and opportunity in our nation’s schools.
Federal education funding is a priority, and never more so than now, as the nation moves out of a deep recession, spurred along partly by action taken last year by the White House and Congress to pass the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. As the U.S. Department of Education has recently reported, more than 300,000 education jobs – teachers, principals, librarians, and counselors – have been directly supported by Recovery Act dollars, along with almost another 100,000 public service positions, including corrections officers, public health personnel, and construction workers.
What is too often lost in the discussion on the Recovery Act is how much worse the economy and employment picture would have been in its absence. The Economic Policy Institute has documented that the rate of job destruction from the beginning of the recession in December 2007 to the passage of the Recovery Act was 50 percent greater than even the severe recession in the early 1980s.
http://www.nea.org/home/38588.htm