Updated: Wednesday, 20 Jan 2010, 3:57 PM EST
Published : Wednesday, 20 Jan 2010, 3:56 PM EST
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Gov. Mitch Daniels urged lawmakers during his State of the State speech to end the practice of schools promoting third graders to the fourth grade even if they cannot read well.
"We must address the single greatest cause of student failure,
the inability of so many of our children to read proficiently,"
Daniels said in prepared remarks. "If a school accomplishes nothing
else in a child's decisive first years, it simply must enable him
or her to read and comprehend the English language," he said.
A Senate committee plans to consider legislation to prohibit
the "social promotion" of many third graders who cannot read
proficiently.
Daniels also used his speech to promote changes designed to
remove the politics from redistricting, and to pass legislation to
tighten ethics and lobbying rules. The Democrat-controlled House
already has passed such an ethics bill, and the Republican-ruled
Senate is working on its own version.
Daniels said lawmakers should work to streamline state
government, in part by eliminating township boards that have more
than 3,000 elected officials and transferring their duties to
counties. The Senate has a bill that would eliminate township
boards outright, while the House has passed legislation that would
allow voters to decide in November whether to get rid of their
township boards and township trustees.
Daniels acknowledged that the economy was taking a toll on
state government and the lives of many Indiana residents.
Tax revenues have fallen far short of previous projections,
forcing Daniels to make hundreds of millions of dollars in budget
cuts in recent months, including $150 million from higher
educationand $300 million from public schools.
Even with those actions, a surplus that stood at $1.3 billion
in July is expected to be drained by the end of the two-year budget
cycle in June 2011 if revenue trends continue. But Daniels repeated
his contention that Indiana was is in better fiscal shape than most
states, many of which have or plan to raise taxes.
"I hope you will join me in saying tonight to the people of
Indiana, for whom we all work, we will make the hard choices, we
will stretch the available dollars, we will do whatever is
necessary but we will not take the easy way out and we will not
make this recession worse by adding one cent to the tax burden of
our fellow citizens," he said.
Daniels won passage of one of his top priorities earlier
Tuesday when the Senate gave final approval to legislation that
will let voters decide in November whether to amend limits on
property tax bills into the state constitution.
State law already caps property tax increases on homeowners
to 1 percent of their homes' assessed values, with 2 percent caps
on rental property and 3 percent caps on business property. But
putting the caps into the constitution will make it harder for
future legislatures to undo.
"You gave the people the chance to decide, as I believe they
will, that lower property taxes are here to stay," Daniels said.
Indiana's unemployment rate was 9.6 percent in November, but
it is lower than that of Indiana's four neighboring states.
Daniels said Indiana is competitive when it comes to
attracting new jobs. In 2009 when national business investment fell
by almost one-fourth, he said, Indiana's job commitments grew over
a near record achieved in 2008. Indiana secured nearly 20,000 new
job commitments last year, according to the administration.
Meanwhile, Democratic Indiana House Speaker Patrick Bauer says
Daniels should have talked more about jobs in the speech.
Bauer acknowledged that Daniels did mention job commitments
the state has won over the past couple of years during the address.
But he says Daniels didn't talk enough about creating new jobs now.
Bauer wants to put more people to work now by tapping tens of
millions of dollars in a trust fund created by leasing the Indiana
Toll Road. The Democrat-controlled House also has passed a bill
that would require companies with state contracts to hire 80
percent of their workers on those contracts from Indiana.
Don't have a Facebook account? Or don't want to share something publicly? Email us here.
We're changing the way comments are posted on each story on WLFI.com, and we believe you'll find this …