As a native Texan and a graduate of the Houston Independent School District, I join my fellow Texans in demanding that the state fund its public schools.
Governor Abbott received millions of dollars from out-of-state billionaires like Jeff Yass, the richest man in all Pennsylvania, to defeat anti-voucher rural Republicans, who put their constituents first. Abbott makes no pretense: he wants vouchers to subsidize the 10 percent in private schools. He doesn’t care about the students in public schools.
Ninety percent of the students in Texas attend public schools. Yet hard-hearted Governor Greg Abbott wants the legislature to pass vouchers, which will be used overwhelmingly by students already enrolled in private schools. I don’t think Governor Abbott has ever visited a public school but he has paid visits to many Christian schools.
Vouchers are welfare for the affluent. They don’t improve achievement for those who use them, nor do they improve achievement for those who don’t.
Most of the children in public schools are Black and Brown. Most of the legislators are White. Is there a clue in that asymmetry?
Would it be too much to ask the legislators to think of the state’s future? It is in the public schools.
Join the rally on Saturday April 5 at the State Capitol.
Dear Superintendents and Trustees,
Save Texas Schools, a non-partisan coalition of parents, students, teachers/school staff and community partners, has stood for funding Texas public schools as well as reforming our testing and accountability systems since 2009. In 2011, we brought 13,000 people to the Texas State Capitol when schools were threatened with a $10 billion reduction in funding. Our actions helped cause the state to significantly reduce those cuts and eventually restore funding in 2013.
Texas is currently facing an even worse crisis in public school funding. With no increase in the basic allotment to account for inflation in 2021 and 2023, public school funding has been reduced by $10 billion in real dollars, or approximately $1,300 per student. With the end of ESSER funding, which helped districts get through the past several years, the majority of school districts statewide are facing significant deficits this year and next. The current funding proposal put forward in HB2 is not nearly enough to cover current gaps and future inflation, as well as possible federal funding cuts.
We believe that the legislature has more than enough to bring funding back to 2019 levels, given the amount of unspent funds that should have gone to public schools in 2021 and 2023 that are sitting in the state’s coffers. Getting back to 2019 levels would mean adding $1,300 per student to the basic allotment. Many education groups around the state, including Raise Your Hand Texas and Fund Schools First, a school district and business coalition in North Texas, are saying the same thing.
We would like to ask two things . . .
1. Join the call for an increase to the basic allotment of $1,300 per student. Texas school funding is a complicated subject, but a simple and straightforward message can galvanize parents, teachers and community members.
2. Encourage your stakeholders to join the Save Texas Schools rally at the Texas State Capitol on Saturday, April 5th. Thousands of Texans will be there to say NO! to underfunding and private school vouchers and YES! to testing and accountability reform. We have already held one rally on a cold and rainy Saturday in February with 1,200 people coming out (click here for a rally video). We believe that, at this crucial moment, we can impact school funding during this time of crisis.
A rally flyer is attached and more information is available at www.savetxschools.org. We also have bus transportation coming from many parts of the state. Information and registration is available on the website.
Thank you for all you do for the children and families of Texas, especially in these difficult times!
Allen Weeks, Ph.D.
Executive Director
Below are photographs I took when I participated in the Save Our Schools rally in 2013. The kids were wonderful, as were the marching bands and parents. Will the legislature listen this time? These wonderful youngsters are our future. We must not let them down.








Allan Weeks and I, February 23, 2013, Austin, Texas


Wonderful picture of you, Diane. Also, I assume that there will be spillover protesting going on about the general Trump/Musk situation. To that, I’d like to add this:
Apparently (from this morning’s news) Trump spoke with the Vietnam leader who says he wants the tariffs for VN to be zero. I wonder what kind of payment/capitulation/trade/self-denigration/whatever Trump gets for lowering the tariff numbers.
It’s just more grift from the master grifter in charge; only now at the international level and using the leverage power of the United States to let the goodies flow to Trump and his buddies, while they continue to rob the American people of their social security, Medicare, and other safety net services and funding.
Also, yesterday morning, Grassley was saying that he trusts Trump. By the afternoon he was talking about that bill to take back Congressional power about tariffs. I wonder what happened in-between. Someone got to him who is actually in touch with what’s going on, and who gives a hoot, perhaps? CBK
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Thanks, CBK.
I just arrived in Columbus, Ohio, for the NOE conference.
Trump got the power to impose tariffs because he declared an “economic emergency.” Congress can cancel the so-called emergency by passing a resolution.
The Senate passed the resolution, with four republicans joining the Democrats. Collins, Murkowski, Mitch McConnell, and Rand Paul.
The House wouldn’t it bring it to a vote, thanks to Mike Johnson. He declared that the entire session of Congress would be called “one day” and that gave him the power to refuse to call a vote. Many Republicans might have voted for it. As people see their retirement accounts, their pensions, and their stocks vaporize, even Trumpers must be souring on “Liberation Day,” the day when the clock reverts to 1913 and the rich pay no taxes at all.
I learned all this watching Rachel Maddow explain it.
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Diane . . .yes, I saw that Maddow program also. And her coverage of all of the protesting that’s going on is exceptional.
My personal situation allows me to keep one eye on what’s going on as I work–but I always think of those who just go to work every day and have children to take care of, etc. How can they possibly keep up with such political intricacies. And yet, April 5 is going to happen. And I think Cory Booker had more influence than we can know.
But I keep thinking that there is something terribly wrong when one or two idiotic people can have such horrid influence on entire nations of others. What’s going on now cannot last. CBK
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Also, Grassley did not vote to take back its authority.
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MY COMMENT IN MODERATION. CBK
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There will be many protests on Saturday (tomorrow). Find one and get out there! If Senator Booker can stand on the Senate floor for 25 hours, we all can do our part to get out there for a few hours!!!
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Don’t forget that the governor is also blocking a special election to replace the representative for Houston who passed away recently.
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Greg Abbott is a fascist. He abhors democracy.
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I see it in my grandson’s Texas high school where most of the teachers soldier on despite the demoralizing treatment of the state. Teachers are trying to remain positive and focus on student needs.
In Florida DeSantis has proposed eliminating property taxes. This is a direct assault on public education. With a scoundrel in The White House these right wing governors are emboldened and eager to destroy public education and turn education into a private commodity instead of a public responsibility.
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