The following summary includes education-related proposals from the 2009 state of the state addresses. To assure that this information reaches you in a timely manner, minimal attention has been paid to style (capitalization, punctuation) or format. To view the documents, click on the blue triangle next to the state.
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 | Accountability |
| 9 | |
 | Accountability--Rewards |
| 1 | |
 | Accountability--Sanctions/Interventions |
| 1 | |
 | Accountability--School Improvement |
| 1 | |
 | Assessment |
| 4 | |
 | Assessment--College Entrance Exams |
| 1 | |
 | At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention) |
| 8 | |
 | At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)--Alternative Education |
| 1 | |
 | Bilingual/ESL |
| 2 | |
 | Business Involvement |
| 19 | |
| Alaska | Governor Sarah Palin's State of the State Address
Accountability
-- Hold schools accountable.
-- Focus on streamlined operations.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance
-- Need responsible resource development – including drilling, mining, timber and tourism – which will lead to more jobs.
-- Propose the Alaska Legacy Plan. I issued an administrative order this week calling for the state's first comprehensive economic strategy. Need to involve business leaders, local officials, and other stakeholders in this strategic action plan for private sector and government to stimulate and diversify the economy.
Career/Technical Education, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Focus on vo-tech and workforce development.
Early Learning
-- Focus on early learning.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance
-- Build a gas line. Alaska's revenue, careers and our ability to diversify our economy – all hinge on the success of this great undertaking. I assure you: The line will be built.
Federal, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Use the state's share of federal funds and Congress' stimulus package for vital needs-- such as infrastructure for our gas pipeline and the Kodiak Launch Facility.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Reduce spending by seven percent from last year's expenditures. Unless the price of a barrel of oil dramatically increases soon, the state faces a potential revenue shortfall in excess of a billion dollars this year.
-- Freeze hiring, exempting public safety, and restrict non-essential purchases. These actions reduce the draw on savings as we monitor revenue for the rest of 2009.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, School Districts
-- Take the next step in our three-year education plan to offer every child the opportunity to learn and work and succeed.
-- Fully forward-fund all our school districts with more than a billion dollars.
Postsecondary
-- Focus on an enhanced University.
Special Education
-- Encourage opportunities for students with special needs.
http://www.gov.state.ak.us/news.php?id=1610 | |  |
| Arkansas | Governor Mike Beebe's State of the State Address
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance
-- Believe that education and economic development are intertwined and inseparable, and one cannot fully succeed without the other.
-- Continue to support the Arkansas Economic Development Commission to attract new jobs and industry.
-- Replenish the Governor's Quick Action Closing Fund with $50 million over the next two years, to position Arkansas to be at full speed when the recession lifts.
-- Continue to work through the Workforce Cabinet agencies to educate, train, and re-train our workforce.
At-Risk--Foster Care
-- Work to place more foster children in qualified homes.
Early Learning, Pre-Kindergarten
-- Continue commitment to pre-Kindergarten.
Finance, Finance--Adequacy/Core Cost, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Propose increases in funding for only public education and the Division of Children and Family Services--public education remains the highest priority.
-- Reach beyond the legal definition of "adequacy" by providing school districts with additional per-student funds. Add 234 dollars of additional per-student funding over the next two years, and give school districts additional one-time enhancement money of 35 dollars per student.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Postsecondary, Pre-Kindergarten, Summer School
-- Prepare students to attend postsecondary education by increasing overall education funding, through pre-k, Smart Core and stronger college prep programs, and now through pilot programs for after-school and summer learning.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary, Financial Aid, Tuition/Fees
-- Improve our scholarship programs so that scholarships reach more students, and the amount of assistance they receive is greater.
-- Broaden the GO Opportunities Grant (a need-based financial-aid program initiated in 2007) to include more non-traditional students, to help additional students in two-year programs, and to expand the total financial support available.
-- Rectify the dilemma of state merit scholarships never reaching the students who qualify for them.
-- Make sure scholarship money remains available once promised to qualified students.
-- Open the doors of higher education to students who qualify for both need-based and merit-based aid, while increasing scholarship amounts.
-- Lessen and simplify scholarship paperwork, with the State providing a single application listing the college assistance available, rather than students and their families having to seek out their best match for financial aid.
Finance, Finance--Lotteries, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary, Financial Aid, Tuition/Fees
-- Structure the lottery to be as efficient and as transparent as possible.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary,
-- Adjust the higher-education funding formula to stress graduation rates, rather than the number of students that happen to be on campus.
Health, Health--Mental Health
-- Expand statewide coordinated school-health system to provide new resources and equipment for our school nurses and in-school mental-health services for our children.
-- Explore new outlets of care for autistic children.
http://governor.arkansas.gov/newsroom/index.php?do:newsDetail=1&news_id=1384 | |  |
| Colorado | Governor Bill Ritter, Jr.'s State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Community Colleges, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Continue aligning the needs of businesses with workforce development and training programs through the Jobs Cabinet and community colleges.
Dual/Concurrent Enrollment, High School
-- Propose a comprehensive, statewide concurrent-enrollment plan to give high school students an opportunity to earn college credits while finishing high school--a student-centered concept intended to give kids a reason to stay in school and accelerate their progress toward degrees and workforce-readiness.
Facilities, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, Rural
-- Work on a plan for wind and solar projects on schools in rural Colorado--to help reduce schools' energy costs.
P-16, Student Achievement--State
-- Continue to offer reform proposals through The P-20 Council.
-- Continue to implement Senate Bill 212, the Colorado Achievement Plan for Kids.
http://www.colorado.gov/cs/Satellite?blobcol=urldata&blobheader=application%2Fpdf&blobkey=id&blobtable=MungoBlobs&blobwhere=1229571409958&ssbinary=true
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| Idaho | Governor C.L. "Butch" Otter's State of the State Address
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Recommend a General Fund allocation for public schools that is about 5-and-one-third percent less than this year's appropriation.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Advance Project 60 – which involves almost every element of state policy – from education and workforce development to quality of life and recruiting foreign investment and trade. Project 60 is designed to strengthen both rural and urban communities. The Innovation Council will be involved in the project by providing a practical and business-oriented approach to turning ideas into jobs and economic activity--this will involve coordinating the efforts of our colleges and universities and other research partners – public and private – to quickly and efficiently determine what works and how it can be applied in the marketplace.
Governance, Governance (Postsecondary), Leadership, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, State Policymaking
--Reorganize the education policy and governance system on the state level with the goal of clarifying responsibilities and lines of authority. The plan seeks to return the Board of Education to the policy-setting mission envisioned in the Idaho Constitution and reinforce the State Department of Education's role as THE state agency responsible for K-12 education. Many operational functions now in the Boards' hands will be shifted to the Department of Education or the Department of Self-Governing Agencies.
http://dfm.idaho.gov/cdfy2010/speech/StateoftheState2009.pdf | |  |
| Kansas | Governor Kathleen Sebelius's State of the State Address
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Community Colleges, Rural
-- Redouble our efforts to educate and train ALL of our citizens for jobs in this new marketplace.
-- Continue collaboration between education leaders and the business community, so that training for new and current workers matches the skill sets needed for the innovation economy.
-- Focus on rural Kansas communities.
-- Announce the first Center for Rural Opportunity recently opened at Sterling College. Soon, centers at Colby Community College and Neosho Community College will open, concentrating on attracting investment, job growth, and business development to our rural areas.
At-Risk, Early Learning, Early Learning--Finance
-- Propose a new Early Childhood Block Grant, driven by research-based programming and accountability measures, focused on at-risk children and under-served areas.
Early Learning, Early Learning--Family Involvement, Early Learning--Finance, Health, Parent/Family
-- Extend the state's network of quality early learning opportunities for children by funding pre-natal care and newborn screening, Parents as Teachers, Early Head Start and quality child care.
Economic/Workforce Development, Business Involvement
-- Issue an Executive Order creating the Kansas Innovation Consortium, charged with overseeing the continued growth of Kansas. Key business leaders will join educators and agency heads to continue expanding and diversifying our economy.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary)
-- Expand the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy, to nearly double capacity, assist with continuing education, and promote residency programs in hospital pharmacies around this state.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Propose $1 million for new teaching scholarships in math, science and technology.
-- Provide an additional $3 million in scholarship money to make college more affordable for 2,000 students.
-- Propose new state resources for post-secondary education, to lower the costs for parents, students and Kansas families
Finance, Kindergarten
-- Fund the third year of our investment in K-12 education.
-- Propose a fourth year of the school finance plan which includes all-day kindergarten.
Finance, Mathematics, Science, Technology
-- Fund the Kansas Academy of Math and Science, opening this year at Fort Hays State University. The Academy is to provide students with a strong math and science education to prepare them to enter the workforce; as high-tech industries represent the fastest growing sector of the economy.
http://www.governor.ks.gov/news/sp-stateofstate2008.htm | |  |
| Kentucky | Governor Steven L. Beshear's State of the State Address
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Modernize and restructure incentive programs to make them more responsive to today's economic needs and to give us flexibility to compete for new jobs.
-- Support existing Kentucky businesses that seek to invest in their facilities and in the continued education of their workforce. This includes extending job-creation incentives for the first time to small businesses.
-- Keep the comprehensive energy plan (released in November) a top state priority, as it is an economic opportunity of immense proportions.
Business Involvement, State Policymaking
-- Review the Kentucky Education Reform Act. Bring together education, business and legislative leaders to review the act and renew and re-energize our commitment to education.
Early Learning, Early Learning--Readiness
-- Prepare children to enter the K-12 system.
-- Unveil (next week) a task force on early childhood development and education that will streamline and strengthen our network of child services and programs to create better coordination, less duplication and more consistent and higher standards.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Fill a $456 million hole in the state budget by June 30 with an additional $150 million in spending cuts, limited transfers of funds and new revenue from increased taxes on tobacco. Already this year we have reduced spending by more than $430 million, shrunk the state workforce by 2,000 employees, we've cut travel, we've reduced administrative costs by restructuring and conducted examinations of efficiency and cost-effectiveness.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, Postsecondary, Teaching Quality
-- Make classroom teaching and learning a priority for state investment.
-- Make higher education a priority for state investment.
-- Increase significantly our tax on cigarettes and other tobacco products--to protect investment in education.
Postsecondary
-- Continue to support the energy research and development work being conducted at state universities, particularly the University of Louisville, the University of Kentucky and Eastern Kentucky University.
Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Continue to protect the retirements of teachers and others.
http://www.governor.ky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/779887EE-31B7-430F-A055-FCB87FA67568/0/20090204_SCAddress.pdf | |  |
| Michigan | Governor Jennifer Granholm's State of the State Address
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Continue to support the Worker Left Behind initiative which trains workers for skilled jobs available in Michigan. This program provides free college tuition, up to $5,000 per year for two years. Currently 52,000 citizens are being trained through the initiative.
At-Risk, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Create Promise Zones in 10 Michigan communities struggling with high rates of poverty--use the promise of free college education to spur greatness in our kids and economic development in those communities.
Business Involvement, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Technology
-- Reform state government. I have asked Lt. Governor Cherry to lead a comprehensive effort to dramatically change the shape and size of state government—reducing the number of our departments from 18 to 8, reforming our civil service system, creating public/private partnerships and infusing technology everywhere.
-- Urge the State Officers Compensation Commission to reduce the salaries of all state elected officials in Michigan by 10 percent.
Community Colleges, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Ask state universities and community colleges to freeze tuition for the next academic year.
Completion/Postsec. Graduation, Postsecondary
-- Double the number of college graduates in the state.
Comprehensive School Reform, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, School Districts, Student Achievement
-- Help school districts replace high schools that don't work, with small, rigorous ones that do, through the 21st Century Schools Fund. Plans are already under way to create more than 25 of these rigorous new high schools that keep kids in school and put them on the path to success in college and careers.
Economic/Workforce Development
-- Fight for good paying jobs and educate and train Michigan citizens to fill those jobs.
-- Continue to make renewable energy a key focus of our economic development strategy.
-- Diversify our economy without deserting our major industry, the American automobile industry.
-- Announce that: Wonderstruck Animation Studios will invest $86 million to build a new studio in Detroit; Stardock Systems, a digital gaming manufacturer, will build its production facilities in Plymouth; and Motown Motion Pictures will invest $54 million to build their new film studios at a former GM plant in Pontiac. Motown Motion Pictures alone will create 3,600 jobs.
-- Announce that Great Lakes Turbine will locate in Monroe, creating hundreds more jobs building wind turbines.
-- Create jobs by reducing the state's reliance on fossil fuels for generating electricity by 45 percent, by 2020. We will do this through increased renewable energy, gains in energy efficiency and other new technologies. Instead of spending nearly $2 billion a year importing coal or natural gas from other states we'll be spending our energy dollars on Michigan wind turbines, Michigan solar panels and Michigan energy-efficiency devices, all designed, manufactured and installed by Michigan workers.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance--Facilities
-- Create the Michigan Energy Corps to put thousands of unemployed citizens back to work this year, weatherizing homes, schools and other public buildings, installing renewable energy technology, and turning our abundant natural resources into renewable fuels.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Postsecondary, School Districts
-- Require cities, townships, counties, school districts, colleges and universities to adopt their own Buy Michigan First policies.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Realize that the state's budget situation is difficult, but it pales in comparison to the situation many states are in.
Mathematics, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Professional Development
-- Give teachers, through the Algebra for All initiative, the professional development they need to teach algebra in a proven way that ensures all kids master it. The program will begin this summer.
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/gov/SOS2009_265915_7.pdf | |  |
| Nevada | Governor Jim Gibbon's State of the State Address
At-Risk, Business Involvement, Kindergarten
-- Protect the all-day kindergarten programs in place in at-risk schools.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Ask the legislature to endorse ways to build critical infrastructure without raising taxes.
-- Implement incentives to bring renewable energy development to the state, which will create jobs.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Financial Aid, Postsecondary
-- Maintain funding for K-12 education.
-- Reduce state funding for Nevada State Higher Education (state is still spending 13.7% of total general fund budget on higher education, as compared to the national average of 11.2%).
-- Maintain the Millennium Scholarship program.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Determine how best to live within our means, as state revenues are down thirty percent.
-- Establish a new state spending system--place a stronger cap on our budget increases in good times, so that additional reserves are available for the tough times without raising taxes.
-- Post the entire state budget online (www.NevadaSpending.com). For the first time in state history, citizens may view the budget themselves.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Propose a temporary six percent pay reduction for state employees instead of layoffs. I pledge to our state employees and teachers that salary levels will be restored as soon as possible. I am also taking the same six percent reduction in my own salary and am asking the other Constitutional Officers and other branches of government to do the same.
-- Freeze step increases and longevity pay, to be reinstated as soon as possible.
-- Reduce state government expenses through agency consolidations and by elimination of duplicate service providers.
-- Create the Sunset Commission – to systematically review agencies, boards, and commissions to ensure that their ongoing operations and budgets are justified.
http://gov.state.nv.us/2009SOS/2009StateoftheState.pdf | |  |
| New Jersey | Governor Jon Corzine's State of the State Address
At-Risk, At-Risk--Foster Care
-- Continue to support the newly created Department of Children and Families in its efforts to help at-risk and foster children.
At-Risk, Equity, Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas
-- Continue to seek court approval for the new school funding formula, which recognizes that 50 percent of the state's disadvantaged students live beyond the borders of Abbott school districts.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Help New Jersey citizens cope with these challenging economic times--this must be the first, second and third priority.
-- Plan, as the national recession continues to take a toll on our revenues, to recommend additional, painful cuts. However, we must continue to do everything possible to limit the impact of cuts on our children's education.
-- Encourage new lending through innovative credit facilities and placing deposits with New Jersey's community-oriented banks.
-- Commit, before any federal infrastructure investment program, $4.7 billion in high-return investments--saving or creating as many as 42,000 New Jersey jobs.
-- Recommend giving local governments the option of deferring a percentage of their employee pension payments.
Curriculum, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, Standards
-- Work to upgrade standards, curricula, and graduation requirements in all of our schools.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--Facilities
-- Create jobs by accelerating public investments in roads, bridges, school construction, and the new mass transit tunnel under the Hudson.
Finance, Financial Aid, Postsecondary
-- Continue to expand financial aid for the state's low- and moderate-income college students that need help.
High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates
-- Continue to collaborate with Colin and Alma Powell in their effort to substantially lower dropout rates.
http://www.nj.gov/sos2009/speech.html | |  |
| New York | Governor David A. Patterson's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Facilities, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, Postsecondary, Health
-- By 2015, New York will meet 45 percent of its electricity needs through improved energy efficiency and clean renewable energy--initiative will be called the "45 by 15" program. The greening of our schools and hospitals is a critical priority--money will be saved in energy costs to balance our budgets, educate our children, and keep our families healthy.
-- Create a clearinghouse to serve as a single point of access for information on all energy efficiency programs for schools, hospitals, and local governments. As a public private partnership between State agencies and the private sector, the clearinghouse will coordinate the dissemination of energy information around the State.
-- Create a New York Energy Policy Institute to coordinate the necessary knowledge base and expertise of our higher education institutions.
Curriculum, Social & Emotional Development, Parent/Family
-- Call upon all parents to increase their efforts to teach their children respect for all people — no matter their race, gender, religion, sexual orientation, disability or national origin.
-- Strengthen our school-based curriculum to reinforce the critical message of acceptance and tolerance.
Early Colleges/Middle Colleges, High School
-- Establish, through public-private partnerships, new early college high schools throughout New York.
Early Learning, Early Learning--Readiness
-- Continue ongoing commitment achieve universal pre-k to better prepare all children for the education they need and deserve.
Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Create 21st century jobs by building a 21st century infrastructure that will allow our private sector to make its own 21st century investments--including investing in higher education institutions.
-- Strengthen our colleges and universities so that New York will always have a skilled and educated workforce.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Expand the SAY YES program, which offers free college tuition to students who meet educational standards.
-- Establish the New York State Higher Education Loan Program, which will provide more than $350 million in loans to students in need.
Health, Health--Nutrition
-- Introduce a five-point plan to reduce childhood obesity--plan includes the Healthy Food/Healthy Communities Initiative which will ban junk food sales in schools, and place a surcharge on sugared beverages like soda.
http://www.ny.gov/governor/keydocs/speech_0107091.html
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| North Carolina | Governor Bev Perdue's State of the State Address
Access, Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Begin the College Promise program to remove financial barriers for access to higher education.
Access, Distance Learning/Virtual University, High School, Teaching Quality, Technology, Technology--Access/Equity
-- Use technology to modernize the classroom and enable teaching to catch up with the way our kids live.
-- Continue to support North Carolina's Virtual Public High School--levels the education playing field for students and assures educational equity.
Accountability, Business Involvement, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, Parent/Family, Persistence/Retention, Public Involvement, School, Students, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Teacher Attitudes
-- Hold schools accountable.
-- Will not give any child permission to drop out of school.
-- Will not give any teacher permission to give up on a student.
-- Will not give any parent a free pass from their responsibility to be fully involved in their child's education.
-- Will not give any segment of our community, particularly our business community, a free pass on education. These leaders need to put the same effort into helping North Carolina be the home of the nation's best educated workforce.
Accountability, Governance, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Reorganized (earlier this year) the public school system with Bill Harrison becoming both the CEO of the State Board of Education and of the Department of Public Instruction.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Create jobs and provide ways for those who are out of work to learn new skills.
-- Put people back to work building bridges, paving roads, and expanding and renovating our infrastructure.
-- Transform our traditional industries into 21st century jobs.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Create jobs and provide ways for those who are out of work to learn new skills.
-- Put people back to work building bridges, paving roads, and expanding and renovating our infrastructure.
-- Transform our traditional industries into 21st century jobs.
Assessment, Standards--State
-- Eliminating duplicative or unnecessary state tests.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Become a Mecca for biotech, pharmaceuticals, and life sciences by bringing together government, higher education and private business.
Career/Technical Education, Community Colleges, Early Learning, P-16, Postsecondary, Pre-Kindergarten,
-- Create a pathway, starting in pre-kindergarten that offers courses of study that fit students' needs -- all the way through vocational, community college, or college. Seamless learning, pre-K through 20, that's the goal.
Federal, Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Ensure the recovery dollars are spent with maximum efficiency, transparency, and accountability.
-- Created the Office of Economic Recovery & Investment to track every dollar. Taxpayers can go to www.NCRecovery.gov to see how the money is spent.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Pay our state's bills.
-- Confront the $3 billion plus shortfall and make hard, painful decisions to balance the budget.
-- Propose to reduce and cut state government programs and services that are effective but which we cannot afford.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Will not sacrifice education--it is the priority.
-- Increase per-pupil spending.
Health, Persistence/Retention
-- Keep all our kids healthy and in school.
http://www.governor.state.nc.us/stateofstate.aspx | |  |
| Oregon | Governor Ted Kulongoski's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Top priority for this upcoming biennium remains education – because only by creating a trained, skilled and educated workforce will we be able to create employment opportunities.
-- Build a protective wall around funding for education.
-- Match the training students are paying for with the skills employers are looking for.
http://governor.oregon.gov/Gov/speech/2009_0112_stateofstate.shtml | |  |
| Pennsylvania | Governor Ed Rendell's State of the State Address
Accountability, Governance, Leadership, School Districts, Student Achievement
-- Adopt laws holding superintendents and principals accountable for boosting student achievement.
-- Adopt laws requiring fundamental change when schools or districts fail to improve year after year.
-- Direct school boards to focus their time to guide district improvement.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Community Colleges, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Hold state institutions of higher learning to the same levels of funding that they currently receive.
-- Increase funds for community colleges--which serve as the training ground for Pennsylvanians seeking new skills to help them re-enter the job market.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Put citizens back to work through continued infrastructure investments.
-- Provide $27 million to ensure job-creating opportunities from projects such as the CSX and Norfolk Southern rail freight expansion.
-- Expand the Business in our Sites program by $60 million.
-- Create a $100 million working capital loan guarantee program and increase the funds available to water and other infrastructure improvements needed for business growth by $40 million.
-- Add $10 million to the Infrastructure and Facilities Improvement Program to help businesses grow.
-- Urge legislature to pass amendments to the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards, which will stimulate job growth.
Community Colleges, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Tuition/Fees
-- Provide $35 million in funds to restore the PHEAA education grant cutbacks.
-- Provide a $15 million increase in funding for enrollment at community colleges across the state. This will make it possible for 10,000 more students to receive grants to study in state community colleges next fall.
-- Introduce the Pennsylvania Tuition Relief Act, which will provide critically needed college tuition assistance to Pennsylvania families earning less than $100,000 a year. Under this Act, all students who qualify and seek to attend public or community colleges will pay what they can afford (at least $1,000 per year) in accordance with established financial aid practices.
-- Enact legislation to legalize video poker and tax its proceeds--to pay for the tuition relief described above.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Believe that investing in higher education is the single most important thing we can do to grow the economy in the long run.
Faculty, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Urge the legislature to pass legislation to consolidate health care benefits for all school employees in the state.
-- Freeze wages for state positions where possible and stop salary increases for this year and next.
Finance, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Enact a Pennsylvania Green Building Code.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Unions/Collective Bargaining
-- Face a current projected budget deficit of $2.3 billion. However, Pennsylvania is in a far better position than most.
-- Hold counties at level funding.
-- Allow counties to impose a sales tax increase of up to one percent on top of the state sales tax and share 50% of those proceeds with cities.
-- Will not increase taxes on personal income, sales or businesses.
-- Propose a tax on smokeless tobacco.
-- Propose a tax on the minerals under state soil when extracted.
-- Need to tap some of our Rainy Day reserves to help close our deficit this year and next.
-- Cut current-year legislative spending by 4.25% (executive branch has already made these cuts).
-- Welcome any revenue enhancement proposals by any member of the legislature.
-- Decrease General Fund expenditures by 2%.
-- Cut $395 million in spending by completely eliminating 20 percent of the 500 line items under the control of the Executive Branch. In some cases we are cutting terrific programs that we can perhaps restore when the economy recovers, such as the Governor's Schools of Excellence, a week-long series of academic enrichment forums offered by the Department of Education to students from all over the state.
-- Cut the Scotland School permanently. This school was founded so that the orphans of the Civil War could receive a free public school education, however none of the current students in the school are orphans of veterans, and only seven have parents who are currently deployed.
-- Continue negotiating with leaders of our state unions to reach agreement on ways to meet our fiscal challenges with the lowest possible number of layoffs.
-- Accelerate local community mergers where it makes sense to do so (as recommended by the State Planning Board).
-- Provide $300 million to help contain local property tax increases and pay for public school activities that have proven effective in the last six years. If the American Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Act includes temporary support for schools, we should put this $300 million into a lockbox so that when the federal funds expire in two years we can ensure that our school districts continue on the path toward full adequacy funding.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Double state capital investment in projects at the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
-- Continue our annual commitment of $100 million in funding for important campus projects at the University of Pittsburgh, Penn State University, Lincoln University, and Temple University.
Governance, School Districts
-- Establish funds for the creation of a legislative commission to study how best to right-size our local school districts. The commission should reporting back, within one year, a set of recommendations for the legislature's approval that sets forth an optimal number of local districts and a plan with specific timelines for adjusting our boundaries to meet the optimal size. Full-scale school consolidation provides an effective way to relieve the local property tax burden all across the state. I challenge the commission to develop a plan that includes no more than 100 local districts statewide.
http://www.governor.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_2_24980_2985_368304_43/http%3B/pubcontent.state.pa.us/publishedcontent/publish/cop_general_government_operations/pagov/media/latest_news/09_2010_final_budget_address.pdf | |  |
| South Dakota | Governor M. Michael Rounds's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Attain a goal of the 2010 Initiative by doubling visitor spending from $600 million to $1.2 billion by the year 2010.
--Continue to approve qualified companies for REDI loans, which in turn will create jobs.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary, Science
-- Partner with the Board of Regents to renovate and revitalize the science facilities at the state's public universities through a $65 million bonding plan--to assist students and state economic development plans.
Federal, Finance, Rural, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Compensation, Teaching Quality--Hard-to-Staff Schools, Teaching Quality--Recruitment/Retention
-- Propose $4,000,000 in state funds to increase teacher salaries, pay teachers for additional training, and to help school districts hire teachers they need for their schools.
-- Continue participation in the federal INCENTIVESplus program, a $20 million grant over 5 years, to attract teachers to high-need schools, primarily in rural areas.
Finance--Resource Efficiency, Postsecondary
-- Remove incandescent light bulbs from the state contract, so that lights in state government buildings will be replaced with energy efficient compact fluorescent bulbs.
-- Require Energy StarŽ requirements in the specs of all bids for appliances used in state government.
-- Require all future state buildings and major renovations to be built to meet LEED Silver rating standards.
-- Propose the Energy Conservation Revolving Loan Fund--a low interest revolving loan fund, in that when the money comes back, it can be loaned out again and again to schools, cities, counties, universities, tech schools, and state agencies that have developed good ways to save tax dollars by becoming more energy efficient. Preference will be given to energy efficiency improvement projects with the shortest payback period.
Finance, Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Expand Opportunity Scholarships by lowering the ACT requirement from 24 to 23 to allow more than 200 more students to qualify.
Finance, High School, Postsecondary, Technology, Technology--Laptop/Related Initiatives
-- Propose $2,954,000 for year 3 of the Classroom Connections Program, which provides classroom laptops for children. This would provide 4,600 more laptop computers for high school students and 400 more for their teachers--would raise the percentage of state high school students with computer access to 38 percent.
-- Migrate the state's six public universities toward a mobile computing environment--so that students are on a path toward using computers for learning in public schools and universities are prepared to accept them.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Increase by 2.5 percent the per student allocation for state aid to local schools.
-- Give local schools extra money if they have declining enrollments or increasing enrollments.
http://www.state.sd.us/governor/ | |  |
| Tennessee | Governor Phil Bredesen's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Mathematics, Science, Postsecondary
-- Ask the General Assembly, the private sector, our university system, and Oak Ridge to work with me in the months ahead to invent a way to become a national leader in basic solar research. Oak Ridge—in combination with UT Knoxville—has the research tools to draw not only scientists from all over the world to come work here, but also Tennessee's brightest
young math and science students.
Completion/Postsec. Graduation, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- "Fix" the fact that as the costs of Tennessee higher education continue to grow, the likelihood increases of some students abandoning the dream of a college degree.
-- Ask the University of Tennessee Board of Trustees, the Board of Regents and the THEC commissioners: work with me and the General Assembly to figure out how we can keep higher education affordable, get more kids to graduate and fashion a true 21st century higher education system for our state.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Invest in creating jobs.
-- Create jobs in the area of clean energy technology.
Federal, Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Send the legislature a conservative budget in March. I plan to wait until the federal government acts and then fashion a budget that incorporates the effects of that stimulus package.
-- Understand that no proposed version of the stimulus bill is any panacea and substantial cuts will still be needed.
-- Remain cautious about the use of rainy day funds.
-- Stay focused on those things that are most important for the long term success of Tennessee: education and the creation of good jobs.
High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, Mathematics, Postsecondary
-- Want to tell the state's eighth graders this: you need more education than you think you do. In the years ahead, making things is something you'll do less and less with your hands
and more and more with your minds. Stay in school. Take lots of math. Graduate. Go to college.
http://www.tennesseeanytime.org/gov/state-of-the-state/2009-State-of-State-Address.pdf | |  |
| Utah | Governor Jon Huntsman's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Career/Technical Education, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary, Technology
-- Continue to support the recently introduced career and technical education bill (HB 15).
-- Continue to support the goal of a Utah College of Applied Technology system that is more responsive to real-time business needs and is more accessible to Utah's students.
Early Learning, Kindergarten
-- Continue to support early childhood learning and full-day kindergarten.
Economic/Workforce Development, Mathematics, Postsecondary
-- Make this year the "Year of Math" for both public and higher education. This will be our economic development engine and our strongest tool in attracting companies to Utah.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Make balancing the budget the first priority. Unlike many other states, we have added flexibility in minimizing impacts to our most critical priorities.
-- Reduce spending to hit short-term targets, while not losing sight of long-term goals.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Continue on our journey to offer teachers a more competitive wage. While in these difficult economic times we may not be able to further that investment, we must not lose ground.
International Education
-- Continue to support our 21st century foreign language education programs (including Chinese and Arabic).
Postsecondary
-- Continue to support energy development and innovation at our higher education campuses.
http://www.utah.gov/governor/news_media/article.html?article=2301 | |  |
| Vermont | Governor James Douglas's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Enhance economic development efforts and pass the Economic Growth Plan (introduced last fall) in the first 100 days of the session.
-- Modernize the permit application process to allow businesses to grow and create jobs.
-- Work with the legislature and others to create the Vermont Economic Response Team, which will use available public and private resources to assist companies at risk.
Early Learning, Early Learning--Finance, Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance (Postsecondary), Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Postsecondary
-- Balance distribution of state funds among early education, K-12, and higher education. We spend relatively little on early education – are among the highest in the nation for primary and secondary education – and near the bottom for higher education.
-- Propose a 20% increase in early and higher education.
Enrollment
-- Recognize the realities of declining enrollments across the state.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Work with the legislature to establish a collaborative process to design a new education funding system that is simple, transparent and sustainable. The current education funding system is failing taxpayers and local voters and is not sustainable.
-- Freeze per-pupil spending for schools and categorical grants at current levels until the new funding system is established.
Finance, Finance--Resource Efficiency, Governance, Special Education
-- Examine school consolidation, governance, special education costs, and other opportunities to achieve efficiencies.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Expect to have a shortfall of more than $150 million in fiscal year 2010.
-- Reduce benefits and cut programs for the next fiscal year – primarily in human services – by at least $150 million out of a general fund budget of less than $1.2 billion.
-- Link the general fund transfer to the education fund to changes in the level of general government spending.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Place the obligation for funding the teachers' retirement system in the education fund. This $40 million would leverage $97 million in state and federal Global Commitment money and reduce the need to cut critical programs.
Finance, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- End property tax subsidies for Vermonters making over $75,000 in order to lower tax rates even further for all payers.
-- Collect no more from residential taxpayers next year than this year.
Finance, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, Governance, School Districts
-- Allow each school district to determine what works best for its students.
-- Strengthen local control by holding school districts directly responsible for tax increases.
Postecondary
-- Integrate the University of Vermont and the Vermont State Colleges into a single organization.
-- Charge a working task force with the responsibility to find academic and administrative efficiencies that will be achieved through consolidation of our university and state college systems. I will ask the task force to report with recommendations by November 15th.
http://governor.vermont.gov/speeches/Inaugural_2009.pdf | |  |
| Virginia | Governor Tim Kaine's State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance
-- Move forward on authorized capital projects and business incentives designed to help create jobs. Set a goal that a minimum of 30 state capital projects worth at least $250 million in construction costs be put to bid prior to the end of this fiscal year (equates to an average of six projects a month between February 1 and June 30, 2009).
-- Invest $5 million in the Governor's Opportunity Fund to attract new jobs.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, Postsecondary
-- Create green jobs.
-- Support the Interagency Task Force for Energy Project Recruitment that will work with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership to build the state's case for renewable energy-related businesses. The task force will include state agencies, university research centers, and federal laboratories based in Virginia.
-- Pursue changes to make it easier to take new energy technology discoveries made on Virginia campuses and turn them into new companies and new jobs in the state. In collaboration with technology-based economic development organizations, our universities will develop a single internet portal for investors to understand both the types of research being done on Virginia campuses and how they can be a part of bringing those new technologies to market.
-- Require in the Code of Virginia that all state and local government buildings meet either LEED or Green Globes standards for efficiency. Focusing on conservation efforts will also lead to construction jobs. Employing carpenters, electricians, installers, and other contracting professionals to retrofit old buildings is one way to put people back to work. In addition, expecting new construction to meet enhanced environmental standards will provide additional opportunities for advanced construction jobs.
Community Colleges, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid
-- Propose difficult cuts in higher education.
-- Propose a lesser cut for community colleges--the most affordable point of entry into the state's higher education system.
-- Provide $26 million in additional support for need-based financial aid to assist middle and lower-income students.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Funding Formulas
-- Propose targeted, performance-based cuts, instead of across-the-board cuts.
-- Focus state funds to protect the students' experience in the classroom, which I consider that the state's core priority.
-- Reduce funding for administrative and support personnel in schools and central offices by applying a funding cap for these positions (a cap is already applied to determine the number of teachers and principals the state funds).
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Tighten the belt of government.
-- Pledge to not meet the budget shortfall through a general tax increase on Virginia's families.
-- Maintain tax cuts already put in place--elimination of the estate tax, sales tax holidays for school supplies and energy efficient appliances, and the elimination of all income taxes for nearly 140,000 low-income Virginia workers.
-- Propose one targeted tax increase--a 30 cent per pack increase on the cigarette tax (would bring Virginia's tobacco tax up to about half the national average).
http://www.governor.virginia.gov/MediaRelations/Speeches/2009/SOTC.cfm | |  |
| Washington | Governor Christine Gregoire's State of the State Address
Economic/Workforce Development, Federal, Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--Facilities
-- Create new jobs by rebuilding roads and schools, and creating a green economy for the 21st century — all in partnership with President-elect Barack Obama's "American Recovery and Reinvestment" plan.
-- Accelerate nearly $1 billion in public works projects to quickly create thousands of new jobs.
-- Introduce the "Washington Jobs Now" plan, which, in combination with the 1,400 transportation projects currently under way or about to start (worth $3 billion), will provide nearly 20,000 jobs over the next two years.
-- Work with legislators and others to create an economic recovery plan that will quickly pass the legislature.
Accountability, Business Involvement, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Postsecondary, Public Involvement, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Reform state government to bring it into the 21st century. For example, I've asked Auditor Sonntag to examine ways to sunset some of state's 470 boards and commissions.
-- Partner with business and labor, state employees, and citizens to reform state government.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Propose difficult budget cuts. I don't like this budget, but I proposed it because I must.
-- Tighten the belt of government, balance the budget and focus on basic needs — protection of our children, our schools and colleges, our public safety, our environment and our economy.
Economic/Workforce Development, Mathematics, Postsecondary, Science, Technology
-- Preserve our education system to make sure we provide workers skilled in science, math, engineering and technology.
Community Colleges, Distance Learning/Virtual University, Postsecondary, Technology
-- Support the 18,000 full-time students at state community and technical colleges that are earning course credits online. It would take an additional four community colleges to offer all those classes the old-fashioned way.
http://www.governor.wa.gov/speeches/speech-view.asp?SpeechSeq=203 | |  |
 | Career/Technical Education |
| 10 | |
 | Choice of Schools |
| 2 | |
 | Choice of Schools--Charter Schools |
| 5 | |
 | Civic Education--Character Education |
| 1 | |
 | Class Size |
| 2 | |
 | Curriculum |
| 5 | |
 | Curriculum--Arts Education |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Foreign Language/Sign Language |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Language Arts |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Language Arts--Writing/Spelling |
| 2 | |
 | Curriculum--Mathematics |
| 13 | |
 | Curriculum--Science |
| 11 | |
 | Demographics--Enrollments |
| 1 | |
 | Economic/Workforce Development |
| 45 | |
 | Education Research |
| 1 | |
 | Equity |
| 1 | |
 | Federal |
| 15 | |
 | Finance |
| 48 | |
 | Finance--Adequacy/Core Cost |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--Bonds |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--District |
| 3 | |
 | Finance--Facilities |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--Federal |
| 14 | |
 | Finance--Funding Formulas |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--Local Foundations/Funds |
| 1 | |
 | Finance--Lotteries |
| 5 | |
 | Finance--Performance Funding |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--Resource Efficiency |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures |
| 45 | |
 | Finance--Taxes/Revenues |
| 20 | |
 | Governance |
| 10 | |
 | Governance--School Boards |
| 4 | |
 | Governance--State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies |
| 28 | |
 | Health |
| 10 | |
 | Health--Mental Health |
| 1 | |
 | Health--Nutrition |
| 4 | |
 | High School |
| 13 | |
 | High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates |
| 9 | |
 | High School--Dual/Concurrent Enrollment |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Early Colleges/Middle Colleges |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Exit Exams |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Graduation Requirements |
| 2 | |
 | International Benchmarking |
| 1 | |
 | Leadership |
| 8 | |
 | Mentoring/Tutoring |
| 2 | |
 | Middle School |
| 1 | |
 | Minority/Diversity Issues |
| 2 | |
 | Online Learning--Virtual Schools/Courses |
| 4 | |
 | P-16 or P-20 |
| 3 | |
 | P-3 |
| 15 | |
 | P-3 Early Intervention (0-3) |
| 1 | |
 | P-3 Family Involvement |
| 1 | |
 | P-3 Finance |
| 5 | |
 | P-3 Grades 1-3 |
| 5 | |
 | P-3 Kindergarten |
| 6 | |
 | P-3 Preschool |
| 4 | |
 | P-3 Public/Private Partnerships |
| 1 | |
 | Parent/Family |
| 7 | |
 | Postsecondary |
| 40 | |
 | Postsecondary Accountability |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Affordability--Financial Aid |
| 17 | |
 | Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees |
| 22 | |
 | Postsecondary Faculty |
| 5 | |
 | Postsecondary Finance |
| 25 | |
 | Postsecondary Governance and Structures |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Institutions--Community/Technical Colleges |
| 16 | |
 | Postsecondary Institutions--For-Profit/Proprietary |
| 2 | |
 | Postsecondary Participation--Access |
| 4 | |
 | Postsecondary Participation--Enrollments (Statistics) |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Students--Adults |
| 10 | |
 | Postsecondary Students--Graduate/Professional |
| 2 | |
 | Postsecondary Success--Completion |
| 4 | |
 | Promotion/Retention |
| 1 | |
 | Public Involvement |
| 5 | |
 | Reading/Literacy |
| 2 | |
 | Rural |
| 4 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar |
| 3 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar--Extended Day Programs |
| 3 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar--Summer School |
| 2 | |
 | School Safety |
| 4 | |
 | School/District Structure/Operations |
| 10 | |
 | School/District Structure/Operations--School Size |
| 1 | |
 | Service-Learning |
| 1 | |
 | Social/Emotional Learning and Non-Cognitive Skills |
| 2 | |
 | Special Education |
| 3 | |
 | Special Populations--Foster Care |
| 3 | |
 | Standards |
| 4 | |
 | State Policymaking |
| 2 | |
 | STEM |
| 1 | |
 | Student Achievement |
| 13 | |
 | Students |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality |
| 18 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Certification and Licensure |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay |
| 25 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Induction Programs and Mentoring |
| 2 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Preparation |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Professional Development |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention |
| 5 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention--At-Risk Schools |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Teacher Attitudes |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Tenure or Continuing Contract |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Unions/Collective Bargaining |
| 4 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Working Conditions |
| 3 | |
 | Technology |
| 13 | |
 | Technology--Computer Skills |
| 2 | |
 | Technology--Devices/Software/Hardware |
| 3 | |
 | Technology--Equitable Access |
| 1 | |
 | Textbooks and Open Source |
| 1 | |
 | Urban |
| 2 | |
 | Whole-School Reform Models |
| 1 | |
|
| 799 |  |
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