Opinion
 By  Staff Reports Published 
5:59 am Wednesday, September 19, 2012

An outline for supporting our schools

By: Craig Ford

In previous columns, I have written about the mistakes I believe Republicans are making in regards to our public education system.

I have also written about the need to provide competitive compensation to keep and attract the best and brightest to the education profession.

When the legislature returns to Montgomery next year, Democrats will offer a full agenda to support our schools.

Our agenda will center around three goals: to make our schools healthier, to provide more resources for classrooms and support teachers and education personnel with a long-overdue pay increase.

Healthier children have an easier time learning, and are more likely to be successful in school.

This year, Democratic Representative Elaine Beech sponsored a bill to allow Alabama farmers to sell their produce to local schools.

This legislation was an excellent start, but there is more we can do to make sure we have healthier foods in our schools.

Another way we can make our schools healthier is to provide more support for physical education and athletics.

Healthier students have an easier time concentrating and participating in class. And as many coaches will tell you, students’ grades tend to improve when they play sports.

In addition to making our schools healthier, the Democratic agenda for 2013 will include measures to provide badly needed resources to our schools. This does not mean throwing money at schools and hoping for the best.

Democrats want to invest in our schools. We do this by investing in proven programs, such as the Alabama Math, Science, and Technology Initiative that has proven so successful in the schools where it has been implemented.

Investing in our schools also means providing teachers and students with the resources they need. In some schools, teachers have to use their own money to pay for copies of worksheets and other handouts they provide to their students.

And how many of us have received letters from teachers asking parents to provide paper towels, tissues and other basic supplies for classrooms because the school did not have enough money to provide them. That just shouldn’t be!

This year, Democrats in the Senate fought to provide a $1,000 to every teacher to purchase classroom supplies. The Republicans reduced that amount to $300. That is better than nothing, but Democrats believe students and teachers need more.

Democrats have also been fighting to provide classrooms with newer textbooks. In some schools, students are using textbooks that are 10 years old.

Every year, Alabama graduates are entering college unprepared for college level courses in part because their high schools were using out of date textbooks that did not include current theories, concepts or teaching methods.

Lastly, the Democratic agenda will include legislation to provide a cost-of-living pay increase for educators and other public employees who have not had a cost-of-living pay increase since before the recession began.

Ask any business owner and they will tell you: if you want the best, you have to offer a competitive compensation package.

Education is not only essential to our children’s future; it is essential to our state’s future.

Without a properly educated workforce, we cannot recruit new or higher paying jobs. We have to invest in our children today, and Democrats are preparing an agenda to do just that.

 

 

Rep. Craig Ford is a Democrat from Gadsden and the Minority Leader of the State House of Representatives.  He has served in the Alabama House of Representatives since 2000.  

Also on Franklin County Times
$5M is secured for I-22 connector studies
Main, News, Phil Campbell, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
June 3, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — A $5 million federal earmark has been secured for engineering and environmental studies tied to the long-discussed Haleyville bypass p...
Ayers hired as RCS assistant superintendent
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
June 3, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — The city schools board of education has hired Nate Ayers as the system’s next assistant superintendent. Ayers’ hiring was approved by b...
Reserve deputies provide manpower where needed
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Addi Broadfoot Staff Writer 
June 3, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A group of volunteers dedicating their time to help local law enforcement is playing crucial roles ranging from courthouse security to ...
Search for executive director begins soon
Franklin County, News
Bernie Delinski For the FCT 
June 3, 2026
TUSCUMBIA — The board overseeing the Alabama Music Hall of Fame has established procedures for selecting a new executive director. The position has be...
Cultura Garden Club celebrates America 250
Editorials, News, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
June 3, 2026
Cultura Garden Club members gathered in red, white and blue for their May meeting at the scenic home of Ann Marie Bucholtz in Phil Campbell, and welco...
The world needs some family values
Columnists, Opinion
June 3, 2026
Far out in Colbert County in an area near Cherokee called Freedom Hills, my parents, Dewey and Lillie Mae Denton, scratched out a life from a small cr...
Tharptown names Burkett baseball coach
High School Sports, Russellville Golden Tigers, Sports
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
June 3, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Becoming Tharptown High’s head baseball coach is the culmination of a goal that was years in the making for Michael Burkett. Burkett jo...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *