Jeanne Dietsch writes regularly about politics and social welfare in New Hampshire. She is a former legislator. The Republican legislature recently voted to cut public school funding, to launch vouchers for private schools and homeschooling, and to cut property taxes.
She wrote:
A decade ago, I read a story in The Atlantic about a boy stranded at sea, in a boat that had been carefully crafted and tended by his grandfather, but neglected by his parents. The motor died and the dinghy was beginning to leak, amid tall waves, while he was still far from shore.
I see New Hampshire’s children in that boat. One in every nine children in NH lives in poverty – less than $22k per year for a family of three – compared with one in fifteen adults. Between 2008 and 2018, the proportion of children on free and reduced lunch rose almost 40%. NH has among the highest rates of college debt, highest tuition, highest growth in teen suicide. Educational achievement has been demonstrated over 50 years to vary with poverty and parental education more than race. Mental health problems can be caused or exacerbated by the stress of poverty and depression.
Are NH leaders ferreting out the causes of child poverty, the causes of mental illness, to root them out? No, because they would have to admit that defunding government and giving the private sector free rein is not working. They would have to stop steering tax cuts to the wealthy and powerful and start investing in children and the future.
Instead, the G.O.P. is defunding 22 positions at DCYF, the people tasked with protecting children, at a time when reports of abuse have increased. Is it because the state is short on funds? No, revenues exceed plan. It is because the pay scale for those positions is so low that DCYF has been unable to fill 41 vacancies. Last time NH let case loads rise to 70 per employee, two children died. The problem is not lack of funds, it is lack of interest from the G.O.P.
The G.O.P is also cutting the education stability grants that the Senate allocated to property-poor districts last term. This burdens those towns local property taxpayers. This increases poverty in those towns. Public schools hand out take-home meal bags to children who cannot rely on being fed over the weekend. Public schools must try to educate children of parents struggling with addiction, children who have no one at home to care for them.
Rather than address poverty and its impact on educational achievement, G.O.P. leaders merely bandage the wounds of a sick society.[1] They inserted “Education Freedom Account” vouchers into the budget. The EFAs give $4600 per year to people already paying their children’s private tuition. For a family living in poverty, whose parents work extended hours to get by, a partial tuition subsidy is useless. And at least one for-profit company is already raising millions in startup money at the prospect of raking in NH taxpayer dollars for providing cut-rate instructional services. The goal of the company is to replace schools and certified teachers with aides who educate children in their homes. This, according to EFA supporters, will cut local taxes because: Professional teachers will be laid off. Schools will close. And taxpayers will no longer need to maintain the stranded assets of the school districts.
These new “micro-schools” cater to people of similar economic, cultural, and educational background. Any sociologist can explain that the way to increase upward mobility is to create networks across boundaries. This approach traps children in bubbles of like-minded people, just as social media does.
Similarly, for mental health, the NH G.O.P majority is funding band aids, increasing budgets for treatment resources. For people already suffering from mental illness, treatment is crucial, of course. However, to ignore poverty’s role in depression and mental illness is like foregoing COVID vaccination and only treating patients after they are sick. It is foolish, expensive, and cruel.
New Hampshire has the second lowest birth rate in a country with less-than-replacement rate nationwide. Each child is that much more precious, as a result. Yet the G.O.P. refuses to invest in them. Is it not obvious that this is a recipe for future decline?
Are NH G.O.P. members so determined to prove that government can do no good that they refuse to use it to help children? Are they so self-indulgent that they only care about their own? Or are they just drinking the kool-aid of the cult?
Whatever reason drives each individual official, they act as a block. We must replace them. And we must not send to Washington any who place profit, power or party over our nation’s future well-being. The seas are rough and the G.O.P. seem willing to let the boat sink, as long as their kids have life vests.

“The seas are rough and the G.O.P. seem willing to let the boat sink, as long as their kids have life vests.”
Considering that many of those kids DON’T have life vests of any kind. . . .
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and every year are less likely to be able to swim
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Good to see you back , Duane.
Missed your most astute posts.
America’s Children Lost at Sea
The seas are rough and boat is tossed
In waters filled with sharks
They skimped on vests to cut the cost
And children are the marks
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Thanks for the kind words, SDP!
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I posted this at opEd https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/What-Happens-When-Society-in-General_News-Caring_Debt_Education_Education-Funding-210623-597.html
The people who run the states are often as corrupt as the federal politicians who ae ending America as we know it.
We must fight at the local and state level and throw out of office those legislators who neglect the people. THAT is not * socialism, it is giving the people in our **society a chance not have a good life.
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What I said at the blog was: “The people who run the states are often as corrupt as the federal politicians who are ending America as we know it. We must fight at the local and state level and throw out of office those legislators who neglect the people, that comprise our society. THAT is not socialism, it is giving the people a chance to have a good life.
“There are 15,880 school stymies in 50 states, and the corruption at the state level is rampant. The people put on the state school boards –those who run the show– are often in the pockets of the corporations who believe that education should be a market…like healthcare. We have seen what that does to the people’s choices.
“Everything is LOCAL…get out and vote the corrupt ones out! Hold them accountable.!”
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You’ll all notice what ed reformers did NOT accomplish in New Hampshire- they did not do anything for students in public schools.
That’s the constant in ed reform- sometimes they push vouchers, sometimes they push charters, sometimes they push microschools or markets for edu-product but the one constant that unites all of ed reform is that they never, ever produce anything of value for any student in any public school.
30 years of paying thousands of these people and public school students got standardized tests out of it. What a bad investment.
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Here’s the list of the ed reform lobby demands for “public education” in Ohio:
https://fordhaminstitute.org/ohio/commentary/six-ideas-conferees-should-include-final-budget-bill
It doesn’t include public school students. Apparently not a high priority for “education reform” in Ohio, the 90% of students who attend the unfashionable public schools.
It’s incredible really- they full time “public education experts” who serve exclusively charter and voucher students. Most of the ed reform lobbying isn’t even relevant to public school students- they’re simply missing.
I don’t object that this “movement” contributes nothing of value to students who attend the public schools they oppose ideologically and instead spend all their time lobbying for charters and vouchers, but I really have to draw the line at hiring and paying them to run public schools. They don’t do any productive work for our schools. Could we maybe be permitted to hire people who will or must public schools continue to be directed by policy people who hope to eradicate public schools?
Why are public school students stuck with such lousy advocates? Can’t we hire and pay people who value our schools? Charters and vouchers have the ed reform echo chamber to work on their behalf. Can’t public school students have advocates too, or is that forbidden?
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Most of the GOP’s leaders are working hard to turn the United States into a kleptocracy like Russia. They don’t give crap about the working class.
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Lloyd, are we there yet? Look who is buying local, state, and federal elections.
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The astounding thing is that voters do not see what they are getting into. Frightening.
The 100 year old former secretary to Werner Von Braun died recently in Huntsville. She was able to emigrate to the US due to her ties to the rocket Germans, and was long his secretary. She had found herself in a secretarial position in the highest parts of the NAZI apparatus, due to being essentially drafted as a young girl to do the work. She knew Himmler and disliked him personally. According to her neighbor, she never wanted to say much about her experience.
What she thought of the Nazis was evidenced by her attitude toward Trump. Long before everyone else was seeing the parallels between the Trump political machine and the Nazis, she commented on it. Her last vote was a decided vote against the Orange man in the late election.
She came to her position due to being young and uninformed. It strikes me that the Republicans would like to have an equally inexperienced electorate as well. I recall a college friend who took a job working for a group that opposed labor unions. She came back spouting all kinds of crap. Before her job, she had been basically apolitical.
Not developing political values in youth is prelude to tyranny. Is it by design that the modern Republican Party opposes education and discussion?
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I think we’ve gotten a pretty good view over the last year of what happens when we stop caring about children.
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What happens when a society stops caring for it’s elders? NYC mayor DeBlasio and UFT head Mulgrew are throwing 1/4 million municipal retirees off traditional Medicare and onto a Medicare Advantage plan in backroom secrecy. Following Weingarten’s lead, Mulgrew is lying his way through this. Thousands even tens of thousands are completely unaware of this proposal, now slated to be reviewed in hearings during the month of August when everyone is in a slow down pattern. Vile to rip the insurance from this cohort, the backbone that nurtured NYC for a total of more than 7 million years and paid into traditional Medicare over bdecades while following the rules. People of color and women will be disproportionally affected. You enjoy your traditional Medicare theirs should be protected too.
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Transparency.
Beyond parents: that’s what many politicians and union heads are. They believe they know what is best and, like Britney Spears’ father, can make decisions that profoundly affect the lives of their grown “children” without their consent.
Trans-parents, see?
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