New York Democrat governor hits school districts, defends education cut

Daniel Wiessner:

Claiming local school districts are playing “political games,” New York’s governor on Thursday defended his $1.5 billion cut to education spending.
Governor Andrew Cuomo’s proposed cut in state aid to schools — the largest in history — is aimed at closing a $10 billion budget gap for the next fiscal year.
Cuomo told reporters on Thursday that his cuts average 2.7 percent per school district, and could be offset by rooting out inefficiencies, using reserve funds and lowering the salaries of superintendents.
“I know there is waste and abuse in the school districts; 2.7 percent in waste and abuse,” Cuomo said after a private meeting with legislative leaders. “Districts say ‘we don’t have any.’ I don’t believe it.”
Teachers’ unions and school officials have attacked Cuomo’s plan, saying that they’ve already made steep cuts in recent years, and that unfunded state mandates are driving up costs. Aid was cut by $1.4 billion in 2010 after being frozen in 2009. School districts have also assailed the governor’s proposal to cap property tax increases.