Crossroads GPS: “Teeth”

A nearly identical pair of ads from Crossroads GPS attack Senate hopeful Tim Kaine (D) over education cuts during Kaine’s tenure as Governor of Virginia. The first “cuts” mentioned, however, were really a proposal to avoid redistributing public school funding from the poorest Virginia districts to wealthier ones. The second were part of Kaine’s outgoing budget proposal, which required deep cuts to close shortfalls caused by the recession, and which was revised by incoming Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-VA) to include even deeper cuts to school spending.

“Kick In The Teeth” Was Local Supervisor’s Reaction To Kaine’s Effort To Save Money And Protect Vulnerable School Districts

Virginia Uses A Complicated Formula To Determine How Much State Money Various School Districts Get For Education. From the Washington Post: “Virginia’s funding formula is meant to distribute money equitably, so poor districts get more school funding from Richmond and wealthy districts get less. The result is that the state currently pays for less than 25 percent of Fairfax school’s budget and closer to 80 percent for some other districts. Many in Northern Virginia have long found it unfair to shoulder such a large share of education costs locally and statewide. Every two years, the formula is recalculated, using updated data on enrollment, income, retail sales and real estate values.” [Washington Post, 1/11/10]

In 2010, Kaine Proposed Delaying Recalculation Of Formula To Save Money And Protect Vulnerable Virginia School Districts. From the Washington Post: “Gov. Timothy M. Kaine proposed a one-year delay in the regularly scheduled readjustment of the formula, a move that would prevent the influx of more than $120 million in additional state funds over the next year to cash-strapped schools in Fairfax, Prince William and Loudoun counties. This fiscal year, Richmond is sending nearly $1 billion to those counties to fund operating costs in public schools. The fate of the so-called composite index is tied to the state budget process, which will be negotiated in the coming legislative session. Kaine proposed the one-year delay in part because it would save $30 million statewide. […] This year, for once, several Northern Virginia districts stood to gain significantly more in state funding, largely because of dramatic declines in the housing market. The news was welcomed by local school officials. But for more than 90 of the state’s 136 school districts, the readjustment meant a greater local burden, and Kaine’s proposal aimed to protect these vulnerable districts.” [Washington Post, 1/11/10]

  • “Kick In The Teeth” Was One Local Supervisor’s Reaction To Denying Money To Fairfax County. From the Washington Post: “Northern Virginia officials, facing unprecedented cuts in their prized school systems, are crying foul. Fairfax County Board of Supervisors Chairman Sharon Bulova (D) called Kaine’s proposal a ‘kick in the teeth.’ ‘We have played by the rules,’ she said. ‘And it’s not fair to change the rules the very year that Fairfax would get some benefit from them.’” [Washington Post, 1/11/10]

Incoming GOP Gov. McDonnell’s Education Cuts Were Even Larger Than Cuts Kaine Proposed

Virginia’s Constitution Requires The Budget To Be Balanced Every Two Years, So Kaine Was Forced To Propose Cuts To Close Recession-Fueled Shortfalls. From FactCheck.org: “Virginia adopts a new budget every two years, and amendments are added to it in the odd year to square the numbers. There’s no question that Virginia experienced serious budget shortfalls during the recession due to much lower-than-anticipated revenues. But the shortfall was closed by the end of the biennium. The same Virginian-Pilot story in which Kaine talks about a $3.7 billion shortfall, notes that the stimulus provided $1 billion in budget relief, and that lawmakers were forced to cut $2.7 billion to balance the budget, as required by the state constitution. Responding to the ad on Nov. 10, Kaine told WVEC ABC 13: ‘I left office with two balanced budgets that I submitted because you have to, by law, submit balanced budgets.’” [FactCheck.org, 11/15/11]

$357 Million In Education Cuts Were Just A Proposal That GOP Gov. McDonnell And GOP House Would Have Had To Approve. From the Associated Press: “Gov. Tim Kaine proposes decreasing state support for public schools by $357 million by 2012. […] The proposals are in a two-year state budget Kaine presented Friday. The plan struggles to reconcile a revenue shortfall of $3.6 billion from 2010 through 2012. […] The exiting Democrat’s proposal must win approval by an anti-tax Republican House and a Republican governor who succeeds him next month.” [Associated Press via WHSV.com, 12/18/09]

Final Budget Signed By Incoming Gov. McDonnell Cut Even More From School Funding In Order To Avoid Raising Taxes. From the Washington Post: “The Virginia General Assembly adjourned its annual legislative session Sunday evening after adopting a two-year, $82 billion budget that cuts millions from education, health care and public safety — curtailing state spending more aggressively than any in generations while fulfilling the new Republican governor’s promise not to raise taxes. […] Funding for schools will drop $646 million over the next two years; the state will also cut more than $1 billion from health programs. Class sizes will rise. [Washington Post, 3/15/10]

[NARRATOR:] When Tim Kaine proposed harsh funding cuts for Virginia schools, one Democrat called it a “kick in the teeth.” Kaine’s last budget cut millions from public schools, hitting [northern Virginia/our children] hardest. So the next time Kaine boasts, [TIM KAINE CLIP:] “We were fiscally responsible while advancing our most important priorities, like education…” [NARRATOR:] You know the truth: Kaine’s budget cut education. Tim Kaine’s plan: education cuts, tax hikes, the wrong priorities for Virginia. Crossroads GPS is responsible for the content of this advertising. [Crossroads GPS via YouTube.com, 9/10/12; Crossroads GPS via YouTube.com, 9/10/12]