EDUCATION NOTEBOOK:
New Year's Resolution for Congress: Rein
in Runaway Education Spending
January 12, 2005
When Congress passed a pork-filled omnibus spending bill just
before Thanksgiving, education programs got a heaping portion.
Dubbed "the fattest legislative hog we have ever seen" by
Taxpayers for Common Sense, the bill contained over 11,000 earmarks
worth $15 billion. Among these, education earmarks numbered 1,200
and totaled $400 million,
according to Erik W. Robelen writing in Education
Week, including $450,000 for the Baseball Hall of Fame for
"educational outreach using baseball to teach students through
distance learning." The bill also included $25,000 for curriculum
development for the
study of mariachi music. Reluctant to leave any lobbyist
behind, Congress also funded numerous special interest education
programs, though funding for special education and Title I came in
at lower levels than in the President's budget.
While the bill funds Title I at $600 million less than the
President's request and special education at $500 million less than
the President request, the "Whaling and Trading Partners" program
received an increase. That $8.6 million could have helped
additional poor or disabled children receive education
services.
Kowtowing to still more special interests, Congress refused to
de-fund the Women's Educational Equity Act even though girls equal
or surpass boys on nearly every indicator of academic achievement.
That's another $3 million.
Two weeks before Congress allocated funding for this outdated
program, the U.S. Department of Education released yet another
report showing girls' educational success. According to the report,
girls equal or surpass boys in early education. In the K-12 years,
they outperform boys in reading and writing and have essentially
closed the gap in math and science. Girls are less likely to repeat
grades or engage in risky behavior. More girls than boys enroll in
undergraduate institutions, and girls are more likely to graduate
with a degree. Girls are also more likely than boys to enroll in
college immediately after high school.
Nevertheless, taxpayers will continue to fund the Women's
Educational Equity Act, premised on the false idea that girls need
federal assistance to keep pace academically.
These weren't the only low priority programs zeroed out in the
President's budget and then amply funded by Congress in the
spending omnibus. Millions of dollars that could have gone to high
priority programs or to deficit reduction followed the same course,
as illustrated in the chart below.
President's Budget (in millions) | Omnibus Bill (in millions) | |
Title I |
$13,300
|
$12,740
|
Special education |
$11,100
|
$10,590
|
Women's Educational Equity Act |
$0
|
$2.95
|
Historic Whaling and Trading Partners |
$0
|
$8.63
|
Even Start |
$0
|
$225
|
Arts in Education |
$0
|
$35.9
|
Community Technology Centers |
$0
|
$5
|
Dropout Prevention |
$0
|
$4.97
|
Elementary and Secondary School Counseling |
$0
|
$34.7
|
National Writing Project |
$0
|
$20.3
|
Javits Gifted and Talented Program |
$0
|
$11.0
|
Migrant and Seasonal Farm Workers |
$0
|
$2.3
|
Foreign Language Assistance |
$0
|
$17.9
|
Congress clearly has its priorities misplaced in its earmark-laden approach to education spending. For the sake of students-and taxpayers, too-Congress needs to get its fiscal house in order.