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Hawaii Governor Ends ‘Mind-Boggling’ Furloughs After Being Called Out By Education Secretary

Gov. Linda Lingle (R-HI)

Gov. Linda Lingle (R-HI)

In order to deal with their budget shortfalls and constitutional mandates to balance their budgets, many states have unfortunately turned to cutting education funding. Hawaii, however, took its cost-cutting to the extreme by imposing “Furlough Fridays,” a series of state-mandated school closures that cut ten percent off of the academic calendar.

The decision to impose furloughs drew the ire of Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who said last week that Hawaii’s decision was “mind-boggling,” and added that the furloughs all but disqualified Hawaii from competing for the $4 billion in Race to the Top funds that were included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act:

“I don’t know anyone who can make a case that eliminating 10 percent of your school days is good for the children of Hawaii,” he said. Moreover, Hawaii faces “a heck of a challenge” to make a compelling case that it qualifies for between $20 million to $75 million in federal “Race to the Top” competitive grants next year, he said.

Yesterday, Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle (R) saw the light and decided to end Furlough Fridays:

Gov. Linda Lingle plans to eliminate 27 Furlough Fridays at Hawaii’s public schools by tapping the so-called rainy day fund and switching teacher training days to class time…Under Lingle’s plan, furlough days would be restored starting Jan. 1 by using $50 million from the fund, formally the Emergency and Budget Reserve Fund, and converting non-instructional hours to instructional hours, totaling 15 school days.

First, this episode highlights that more aid to states should be part of any job creation package that Congress might consider. Letting states slash their primary education systems to smithereens serves no one’s interest — not the teachers who see their purchasing power diminish, the parents who need to find alternative arrangements for their children during the day, or the students whose education has been compromised.

But even given the budget situation, Lingle’s furloughs were an extraordinarily bad idea. Lawmakers really need to rethink their knee-jerk impulse to reduce time in the classroom when faced with budget problems, as expanding time — particularly discarding the outdated 180 day model — and trying to integrate schools into the wider community is a necessary part of revitalizing America’s education system. As Duncan told The Wonk Room last month, schools that are following the traditional model of six hours per day, five days per week, for nine months “don’t serve anyone well.”

As CAP pointed out in a new report examining leaders and laggards in terms of innovation in education, “Hawaii does a below-average job managing its schools in a way that encourages thoughtful innovation. Ninety-four percent of teachers report that routine duties and paperwork interfere with their teaching, and only 22% of teachers like the way their school is run.” Let’s hope that this controversy over the furloughs causes Hawaii’s administration to take a deeper look at its education policies.

Is Work Sharing A Viable Solution To The Unemployment Problem?

johndeere-factory-workerAs the unemployment rate stubbornly refuses to come down, Congress has rightfully begun looking at ways to spur job creation or, if nothing else, prevent further job loss. One of the ideas that has gained a bit of traction is work sharing, or subsidizing employers who reduce workers’ hours (and maintain their pay) instead of laying some of them off:

A bill sponsored by Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) would give unemployment compensation to employees who accept a reduced work schedule to allow their companies to avert layoffs or to hire more employees…Democratic Sens. John Kerry (Mass.), Paul Kirk (Mass.) and Patrick Leahy (Vt.) have signed on as co-sponsors. Reed’s plan calls for up to $600 million for the program, which would last for up to two years.

The Hill noted that “Rhode Island and 16 other states already have their own work share programs, which have saved more than 146,000 jobs this year so far, according to the Labor Department.” According to Reed’s office, “if all 50 states participated in work share programs, between 400,000 and 500,000 jobs a year could be saved.”

The most outspoken advocate of work sharing has been Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, who pointed out that the process is cheap, simple, and quick:

In principle, the government can go this route to save jobs at a cost of a bit more than $20,000 per job – far less than the cost per job saved through the stimulus package…Approximately 4 million people leave their jobs every month, half involuntarily. We have job growth if we either create more than 4 million jobs or reduce the number of jobs lost below 4 million. If a work share program reduced involuntary job loss by 20 percent, or 400,000 per month, it would have the same effect as adding 400,000 new jobs.

Both Baker and Paul Krugman point to the example of Germany, which has a work sharing program, along with strong labor protections. As Krugman wrote, the measures “didn’t prevent a nasty recession, but Germany got through the recession with remarkably few job losses.” Plus, as Peter Dorman at EconoSpeak noted, work sharing helps preserve human capital, as firms don’t have to re-hire and re-train workers down the line — they just increase their hours back to where they were previously.

All that said, this is still only a B- idea. (Krugman acknowledges this, calling it the “third-best” economic policy available, after committing to moderate inflation to lower interest rates or further fiscal stimulus.) In the absence of stronger stimulus measures, such as aid to states or a direct job program, it will do some good — and it may be the only thing that a deficit-crazed Congress is willing to consider. But it is inefficient, has the potential to be wasteful, and obviously does nothing for those already out of work. Work sharing isn’t terrible, but I’d like to think that we can do better.

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