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Roch Introduces Major Cost-Saving Amendment

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

REP. ROCH INTRODUCES COST-SAVING

AMENDMENT TO STATE BUDGET

Amendment eliminates more than 4000 vacant state jobs

 

SANTA FE, NM—State Representative Dennis Roch (R-Tucumcari) introduced an amendment to House Bill 2, the General Appropriations Act, which would have de-authorized more than four thousand vacant positions in state government.   

 “Citizens throughout New Mexico should not be asked to shoulder additional tax burdens,” Roch said during the debate on the amendment, “when taxpayer dollars continue to fund empty desks in Santa Fe.” 

The amendment, which was tabled on a nearly party-line vote, would have eliminated thousands of positions.  The consequential savings could have closed much of the estimated $300 million gap between state revenue and state spending.

“New Mexico is not undertaxed; it continues to overspend,” said Roch.  “It’s unfortunate that some legislators prefer to make taxpayers pick up the cost of the state’s overspending.”

 

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The Case for Protecting Our Teachers

Monday, February 08, 2010
website: http://www.nmhousegop.com/  
twitter: http://www.twitter.com/nmhousegop
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  
January 28, 2010
CONTACT:
(505) 216-6342

The following editorial appeared in the Santa Fe New Mexican on February 6, 2010 under the heading “Law says fund schools first,” and is offered for submission to all media. 

 

The Case for Protecting Our Teachers

 

By State Representative Dennis J. Roch, District 67

 

As the state legislature deliberates over New Mexico’s budget shortfall, I have frequently heard the statement, “Every program must take its share of cuts.”  This statement assumes that every program is of equal value, and has an equal return for our future benefit, an idea which is far from the truth.

 

On the contrary, public education is a constitutional requirement and an essential government service.  It deserves to be fully funded before we even think about spending our hard earned tax dollars on non-essential services.

 

Our schools have already suffered cuts of more $200 million in general fund dollars over the last two years, a decrease of more than 10%.  Because such a large portion of school funding is in personnel, cuts of this magnitude compel schools to eliminate positions, resulting in larger class sizes and causing student performance to suffer.  As someone who has taught both high school and middle school and now serves as a district-level administrator, I have seen firsthand how teacher funding affects education.  Colleagues of mine who were excellent teachers have sought other professions that compensated them more fairly for their education, skills, and experience.  I have seen students who were once energetic and passionate about their studies become disenchanted or frustrated because they were not getting what they needed in order to succeed.

 

So where did the $200 million that was cut from education go?  Shockingly, it was diverted to such non-essential programs as the Spaceport.  As of last year, the state had spent $198 million on this project, one for which I don’t see any requirement in the state constitution.  I called on my colleagues to suspend expenditures on the Spaceport, both in this session and in last fall’s special session.  Both times, my efforts were thwarted in committee.  So while school funding is threatened, the state pays for a third chef at the Governor’s Mansion, a Rail Runner that loses thirty-four million dollars a year, a jet for Governor Richardson and Lt. Governor Denish, and university lobbyists with staggering six-figure salaries—paid for with tax dollars to lobby for more tax dollars.

 

While all of these extravagances continue to receive funding, some have even suggested a 2% cut to teachers’ salaries.  This proposal comes after these same employees were hit this year with a mandatory increase in their retirement contributions, reducing their wages by another 1.5%.  Then, on top of all this, there is now talk that educators’ health care deductibles could nearly double next year, increasing their out of pocket expenses and further decreasing their take-home pay yet again.

 

Trust me, shortchanging education has dire consequences for New Mexico’s teachers and students.  So before buying the line that, “Every program needs to be cut,” consider how the loss of even one excellent teacher compares to the loss of the Governor’s jet or his third chef.  There couldn’t be a stronger case for protecting our teachers.

 

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State Sovereignty

Thursday, January 21, 2010
Representative Dennis Roch (R - Curry, Harding, Quay, Roosevelt, San Miguel, & Union) talks about HJR1, State Sovereignty for New Mexico.
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