My detractors –
and even some of my friends – think I’m in the tank for the Republican Party.
They’re obviously
not paying attention.
I tend to be more
critical of Republicans than I am liberal Democrats. That’s because I have higher
expectations of Republicans. I expect them to be conservative, and I don’t like
it when they don’t act in a manner consistent with what they profess to
believe. I don’t consider myself a partisan. I am, however, an ideologue, and
proudly so. I usually tell people I’m not a Republican, but I’m a conservative.
That’s not a
popular thing in certain circles. There are some people who believe our elected
Republican leaders, especially in Washington D.C., can do no wrong. It’s heresy
to criticize John Boehner or, especially in Kentucky, Mitch McConnell. Express
disappointment with something McConnell says or does and there are folks who
will call you a liberal, say you don’t understand how government works, or
otherwise belittle you simply because you’re tired of so-called conservatives
acquiescing to liberal demands and positions.
But I’ve never
been afraid to point out a bad idea, no matter where it comes from, and a
couple of Kentucky Republicans floated a really bad one last week.
Senators Damon
Thayer and Chris Girdler said they’d be filing a bill in next year’s General
Assembly session to force local school districts to delay the start of classes
each year. Currently, most school systems in eastern Kentucky go back the first
week of August. Urban districts and those in less mountainous areas wait a week
or two longer to begin the school year. Thayer and Girdler want to push back
the starting date to either the last week of August or after Labor Day in
September. They cite decreased tourism spending and increased school energy
costs as the reason.
This is a bad
idea. What they in essence propose is to trade the month of August for the
month of June. Most eastern Kentucky districts hold classes right up until the
end of May as it is, mostly due to weather concerns. Even what my dad called a “skiff” of snow is enough to cause
most rural systems to cancel classes. While state roads may be in good shape,
county-maintained roads aren’t. Many school districts have snow plans, where
they only run buses on main routes, but they’re hesitant to use those plans.
Parents often keep their children home when buses run on a snow plan. This
costs the schools money, because in Kentucky, schools are funded based on
average daily attendance rather than enrollment.
When winters are
exceptionally harsh, like this past one, classes can be pushed back into June
even if the state grants a waiver for instructional days missed. Even this
causes problems for some, and if August is basically swapped for June, those
problems would be compounded.
Kentucky allows
local school districts to hire teachers who only have their undergraduate
degrees, but the law requires teachers to obtain a master’s degree within a
certain number of years after they’re hired. Most teachers working to earn their
post-graduate degree, or additional certification such as their Rank I
accreditation, take summer classes. Colleges offer summer classes in June and
July. If the teachers are busy in June in their classrooms, they can’t take the
required college classes to be able to keep their jobs. Such a schedule change
would be very detrimental to them.
When I was in
school, we usually didn’t start classes until after the state fair had begun.
My dad was a teacher, and we usually managed to make it to Louisville on a
weekday to attend the fair before school got underway. But my sophomore, junior
and senior years of high school coincided with the bad winters of 1977, 1978
and 1978. All three of those years, we got out of school for Christmas and only
got a handful of days in before district tournament time in March. I graduated
in the last week of May. After that, schools began starting the year earlier to
make up for bad winters.
This isn’t the
first time in recent months that I’ve disagreed with Girdler. Last year, he was
harshly critical when the city of Somerset opened its own gas station to combat
what city officials thought was gouging and collusion on prices. I thought
Girdler was wrong then, and I think he’s wrong now.
*****
Speaking of gas
prices, news reports last week said the cost of a gallon of gas would be going
up in Kentucky because of a BP refinery shutdown in Indiana. We, along with a
number of Great Lakes states, were said to be the ones most affected by the
problem.
That’s funny. I
thought Kentucky was under the thumb of Marathon, and that the Marathon
refinery in Ashland had a monopoly on gasoline distribution in Kentucky, and
that’s why we pay too much for gas. At least that’s what Jack Conway, attorney
general and Democrat gubernatorial candidate, has always said. I guess this
development blows a hole in Conway’s argument.
*****
And speaking of
Conway, it’s become apparent that one of his key campaign points is going to be
that his Republican opponent, Matt Bevin, is not a Kentucky native like Conway
is.
Democrats must
have short memories. Two decades ago, Kentucky’s governor was a Democrat named
Brereton Jones. He must have been a Bluegrass native, right? Nope, he’s from
West Virginia.
I guess
non-native Kentuckians can only be governor when they’re Democrats, right?