U.S. public schools cut 11,000 jobs in December

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Got to love this economic recovery they speak about all the time on the news...

U.S. public schools cut 11,000 jobs in December | Reuters

U.S. public schools cut 11,000 jobs in December



By Anna Yukhananov and Lisa Lambert

WASHINGTON | Fri Jan 4, 2013 4:44pm EST

(Reuters) - Local U.S. governments cut jobs for the fourth straight month in December, including 11,000 in public schools, dragging down the nation's fragile economic recovery, jobs data showed on Friday.

Local government jobs are now at their lowest level since October 2005, with the bulk of the decline coming from layoffs of teachers and other school employees, according to the Labor Department.

For more than a year, persistent declines in public sector employment - particularly at the city, county and school district level - have stood in contrast to steady job gains in the private sector.

Jan Eberly, the U.S. Treasury assistant secretary for economic policy, said recent improvements in state budgets may start to reverse some of the declines next year.

"There is some expectation that state and local budgets will start to improve as the economy is picking up, and we're seeing improvements in many states, though not in all states," Eberly told reporters on Friday.

Overall government employment in the United States fell by 13,000 last month, the Labor Department said. Those jobs were almost all lost in public schools. Local governments shed 11,000 school jobs, and local agencies outside of schools had 2,200 more job losses.

State governments, meanwhile, added 4,000 jobs while federal government jobs fell by 3,000 in December, according to the report.

State and local government spending grew at a 0.3 percent annual rate in the third quarter, after 11 straight quarters of contraction, the Commerce Department reported last month. But many states, cities and counties are planning to keep spending flat as they continue to face uncertainty about federal funding levels and revenues.

Since August 2008, local governments have shed some 300,000 teaching and other school jobs, raising fears the layoffs could hurt students' education. Typically, schools try to avoid cutting jobs in the middle of the school year, and make most of their staffing changes in the summer.

The figures are also a worrisome sign that local budgets are still stuck in a slump. State governments have added 24,000 jobs since last December, but local governments have cut more than double that number in the past year.

The 2009 federal economic stimulus measure helped offset states' budget gaps resulting from the recession. But with the money now gone, state aid squeezed and tax revenues low, states have chipped away at their public safety and education workforces.

"(We) remain hopeful that President (Barack) Obama and the 113th Congress, as well as governors, will prioritize our students and public education and work hard to stave off further cuts," said Dennis Van Roekel, the president of the National Education Association, the largest U.S. teachers' union.
 

Lord Scion

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I bet you won't hear about the government cutting 11,000 military jobs in one month :shaq2:


You won't hear it on the news, but trust me.... this President is cutting military jobs like crazy. It's very hard to stay in the military these days due to this economy. You can't just easily reenlist anymore.
 

Patrick Kane

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protection>> education according to some in office. smh

Protection from who? Those same officials in office know the U.S spends billions on their military so they can continue to be the worlds bully, not to protect its citizens.

Even if the U.S spent triple of what China spends, they'd still be leading the world in military spending by an immensely large margin and the additional funds could be spent on education, infrastructure, health care, innovating technological advances, ect. that the country desperately needs. In those sectors alone, millions of jobs would be created solving many of the issues with todays economy. But I guess that would be just too much of an easy fix :comeon:

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:scusthov:
 

Nasty_Nate

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He's cutting Military contractors not military.

I am in the Army, the drawdown has already started and is happening in phases. When I was in recruiting in fiscal year 2010 there were massive mission reductions(bringing less soldiers in, A LOT less), and this continued on through fiscal year 2011. As previously stated, it's harder to reenlist as well. Back in the day you could reenlist with no questions asked. Now there is a cap on reenlistments and those wanting to reenlist must submit a packet to Brigade, and the Brigade Command Sergeant Major and Brigade Commander will pick the best soldiers among those packets submitted and allow them to reup.
Army to cut nearly 50,000 soldiers over 5 years - Army News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Army Times ...and this is just the beginning

I agree that the defense budget definitely needs to be cut, but we need to be careful that we don't screw it up like Clinton did. I personally think Clinton is one of the greatest Presidents we've had, but he screwed up the drawdown. We must still be prepared for shyt to jump off. Personally, I think our Reserve and National Guard forces should be larger and more focused on homeland defense instead of going on to deployments to Bosnia, the Sinai, and Djibouti. That, in addition to cutting the active duty force, should free up funds.
 
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I am in the Army, the drawdown has already started and is happening in phases. When I was in recruiting in fiscal year 2010 there were massive mission reductions(bringing less soldiers in, A LOT less), and this continued on through fiscal year 2011. As previously stated, it's harder to reenlist as well. Back in the day you could reenlist with no questions asked. Now there is a cap on reenlistments and those wanting to reenlist must submit a packet to Brigade, and the Brigade Command Sergeant Major and Brigade Commander will pick the best soldiers among those packets submitted and allow them to reup.
Army to cut nearly 50,000 soldiers over 5 years - Army News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Army Times ...and this is just the beginning

I agree that the defense budget definitely needs to be cut, but we need to be careful that we don't screw it up like Clinton did. I personally think Clinton is one of the greatest Presidents we've had, but he screwed up the drawdown. We must still be prepared for shyt to jump off. Personally, I think our Reserve and National Guard forces should be larger and more focused on homeland defense instead of going on to deployments to Bosnia, the Sinai, and Djibouti. That, in addition to cutting the active duty force, should free up funds.

Yes draw-down happens but that isn't a necessarily a cut. Don't worry he is switching the deployment from Iraq and Afghanistan to Africa, Syria and in the very near future Iran. The defense contractors are losing alot more jobs than military and go to the private sector to seek more contracts.
 
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