Teachers, supporters take to the streets
By: NICOLE SACK - Staff Writer
Temecula Valley Teachers Association organizes effort | Thursday, March 13, 2008 1:19 AM PDT ∞

Carly Cheek, 11, a student at Abby Reinke Elementary School, gives a handful of letters protesting the state's budget squeeze on education to Donna Thompson of state Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth's office in Temecula on Wednesday. More than 100 Temecula Valley Unified School District teachers marched to his office to deliver the letters. In the background is Tom Rogers, also of Sen. Hollingsworth's office.
STEVE THORNTON Staff Photographer
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TEMECULA -- A group of more than 100 teachers, children and parents marching to protest the state's budget squeeze on education may have caught the attention of motorists along one of the city's busiest streets, who honked and hollered in support Wednesday afternoon.
But the group's primary goal was to sway state lawmakers to consider the potential effects on education in the Temecula Valley Unified School District, as well as the entire state.
"We are hoping lawmakers rethink the whole budget," said Judy Calavan, a third-grade teacher at Vintage Hills Elementary School. "We also want to increase public awareness. I'm not sure people understand how bad this proposal is or how bad it could be."
Beginning at 4 p.m., the sea of protesters in blue union shirts and holding signs with a barrage of messages, made their way from the Temecula Duck Pond to the district office of State Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth to deliver more than 2,000 letters urging a reconsideration of potential cuts to the anticipated level of education funding for the coming year.
"We have to send the message that (legislators) are not going to balance the state budget on the backs of our students," said Ed Sibby, president of the Temecula Valley Teachers Association, which organized the demonstration.
In January, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger introduced a budget proposal that aims to make up a projected $14.5 billion deficit in California's budget for the fiscal year starting July 1. Schwarzenegger's plan to counter the deficit by across-the-board reductions in state spending means school districts statewide would get $4 billion less than expected.
In anticipation of the reduced funding, school districts throughout the state have grappled with the expectation of less money flowing into their coffers. The Temecula Valley Unified School District expects a $10.4 million reduction in revenues and this week, layoff notices were delivered to more than 200 teachers.
Hollingsworth, R-Temecula, whose 36th District includes Murrieta, Temecula, Wildomar and parts of Menifee, said that among his constituents, the most vocal opponents to the governor's proposed budget are school administrators and parents.
While Hollingsworth was in Sacramento during the protest, he did discuss the budget issue in a phone interview Wednesday.
"We have to put this in perspective," he said. "We are looking at the education budget being very close to the same of what was being spent last year."
According to the state's revised 2007-08 budget, $50.4 billion was spent on kindergarten to 12th grade education. The governor proposes to spend $49.3 billion in 2008-09.
"The governor is proposing a 10 percent cut in the increase of spending," Hollingsworth said. "The state has a problem of spending more than we take in."
Wednesday's event was "a cog in a larger wheel" to create momentum in raising awareness of the budget's effects on schools, said Larry Thompson, a teacher at Temecula Valley High School and association member.
He said the teachers union has already made lobbying trips to the state Capitol and has already delivered more than 1,000 letters to local legislators. He said more events will likely be conducted in Temecula's school district, as well as others in the county.
"We are the bad dream that is not going away," he said of the efforts to influence lawmakers.
-- Contact staff writer Nicole Sack at (951) 676-4315, Ext. 2616, or nsack@californian.com.