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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Educators Tout New Revenue Sources in Face of Santa Fe Budget Axe

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Monday, March 2, 2009   

Santa Fe, NM - As lawmakers in Santa Fe continue to seek ways to trim the state's budget, the outlook for struggling schools remains bleak. Educators complain that even before the economic downturn, New Mexico schools were underfunded by 15 percent, according to one of the legislature's own studies.

Eduardo Holguin, government relations coordinator for National Education Association-New Mexico, says it is unfortunate that education cuts remain part of the plan to make up for the state's large budget shortfall.

"To have further cuts put on top of us makes it impossible for us to meet the mandates of being able to educate every child in New Mexico to the best of our ability."

Holguin points out that sufficient funding for public education is required by the state constitution, and revenue-generating options are on the table. Bills in the Roundhouse now would raise money for education by closing corporate tax loopholes, implementing a statewide lodgers' tax, allowing small increases in the gross receipts tax, and repealing recent tax cuts for high-income New Mexicans.

Holguin says he doesn't buy the argument that with today's bleak economic conditions, it's not the right time to invest in education.

"That's the same thing we heard in good times. This isn't a whim. This is something that is actually in our state constitution that says we will 'sufficiently and equally' fund our public schools."

Holguin says the question of adequate school funding soon could be taken out of the hands of lawmakers.

"It's getting to the point where if the legislature can't or won't do it, it might end up in court. Then the court will have to decide what the sufficiency mandate is in the constitution."

The bills to raise education revenue are SB389, SB595, SB412 and HB346. Cuts to education were included in HB854 and HB2, as of press time.


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