House
Republican Press Release
November
24, 2008
Press
Office: 860-240-8700

Majority
Democrats Kill Proposal that Would Have Saved Local Taxpayers Millions
A measure that would have
postponed a state mandate that requires suspended students to serve their
suspensions in school rather than out of school and saved local taxpayers
millions was killed Monday by majority Democrats in the state House of
Representatives, state Representatives Selim Noujaim and Anthony J. D’Amelio
said today.
The proposal, a House Republican
amendment to a bill authorizing various relief measures for municipalities,
would have postponed the in-school suspension mandate until July 1, 2012. The measure
was offered during Monday’s Special Session of the Connecticut General
Assembly.
Under a recent state law (Public
Act 07-66), most students who are suspended from school must serve their
suspensions in school rather than out of school. The mandate, which takes
effect July 1, 2009, is expected to cost municipalities an additional $80
million in 2008 and $100 million more in 2009.
“Waterbury school
administrators, who strongly oppose this new state mandate, say it will add
significant costs to the city’s education budget – money that is simply not
there,” said Representative Noujaim, R-74th District. “The
requirement forces Waterbury schools to provide rooms where suspended students
can serve their suspensions and teachers to supervise them, which could add
millions in unanticipated costs to Waterbury’s education budget. At a time when
Waterbury and other cities across the state desperately need relief, it is
beyond belief that the state legislature’s majority party could have rejected a
common sense proposal like this.”
“With our state’s economy
already in a slump that is expected to get worse in the months ahead,
overburdened taxpayers in Waterbury and Middlebury cannot afford this mandate,”
said Representative D’Amelio, R-71st District. “We convened in
special session today to provide relief to municipalities and to eliminate the
state’s projected deficit of more than $300 million for the current fiscal
year. Our proposal to postpone in-school suspensions until 2012 was offered in
a bi-partisan spirit to help our cities and towns cope with sharply-rising
costs and revenue losses. At a time when families across the state are
struggling to keep their homes warm, feed their families and pay their
mortgages, it’s unbelievable to me that the majority Democrats would have
blocked a proposal that would have helped our cities and towns get through a
deepening recession without raising property taxes.”