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The Water Cooler
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Teachers strike
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<blockquote data-quote="SlugSlinger" data-source="post: 3091971" data-attributes="member: 7248"><p>Does anyone have the TPS 2018 budget numbers? What I want to see is a comparative analysis to say about 2000. What I suspect you will see is the budget shift from educating the kids to being a foster parent. What I mean is the school now feeds the kids meals including breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks for the weekend. The problem here is there is a finite budget, these meals are moving funds from the teacher's compensation to feeding kids, which the school should not be involved with. Once this is offered, the parents know it and now expect the school to provide for the kids and take the parents place as the provider for the kids. It's also training the kids to rely on the government to provide for them. It's really sad.</p><p></p><p>The school administrations are now making it appear that teachers are being damaged because they aren't being paid enough, whether that is true or not, I'm not arguing that point. My point is, the administration has made the choice to foster the kids instead of paying the teachers. Now they are running out of money, to make it more consumable by the public, lets argue teacher pay instead of funding the new social program of taking care of these kids 24 hours a day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SlugSlinger, post: 3091971, member: 7248"] Does anyone have the TPS 2018 budget numbers? What I want to see is a comparative analysis to say about 2000. What I suspect you will see is the budget shift from educating the kids to being a foster parent. What I mean is the school now feeds the kids meals including breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks for the weekend. The problem here is there is a finite budget, these meals are moving funds from the teacher's compensation to feeding kids, which the school should not be involved with. Once this is offered, the parents know it and now expect the school to provide for the kids and take the parents place as the provider for the kids. It's also training the kids to rely on the government to provide for them. It's really sad. The school administrations are now making it appear that teachers are being damaged because they aren't being paid enough, whether that is true or not, I'm not arguing that point. My point is, the administration has made the choice to foster the kids instead of paying the teachers. Now they are running out of money, to make it more consumable by the public, lets argue teacher pay instead of funding the new social program of taking care of these kids 24 hours a day. [/QUOTE]
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