Friday, April 16, 2010

Florida Governor Splits With G.O.P. on Teacher Pay - NYTimes.com

Florida Governor Splits With G.O.P. on Teacher Pay - NYTimes.com

Florida Governor Splits With G.O.P. on Teacher Pay





Enlarge This Image
MIAMI — Gov. Charlie Crist has been jawboned and buttonholed as he has traveled around the state in recent days, and his office was deluged with 120,000 messages. Passions have not run so high in Florida, the governor said, since the controversy over ending the life of Terri Schiavo in 2005.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
In Miami this week, Leinad Coya, a seventh-grade teacher, protested the controversial bill that Governor Crist vetoed Thursday.
Steve Cannon/Associated Press
A teacher, Scott Whittle, left, discussed a sweeping education overhaul with Gov. Charlie Crist, right, on Tuesday in Tallahassee.

This time, the point of contention was eliminating tenure for Florida public school teachers and tying their pay and job security to how well their students were learning.
On Thursday, Mr. Crist picked a side, vetoing a bill passed last week by the Florida Legislature that would have introduced the most sweeping teacher pay changes in the nation.
The veto puts Mr. Crist, a moderate Republican, at odds with his party base in the Republican-controlled Legislature. His decision has also renewed speculation that he might drop out of the Republican primary for a United States Senate seat and run in the general election as an independent. For months, he has been trailing the more conservative Republican candidate, Marco Rubio, a Tea Party favorite, in polls.
Mr. Crist said Thursday that his decision was not political.







Charter Extension Denied to Low-Scoring Stanford School

Responding to low test scores, the Ravenswood school board denied a charter extension to a K-through-12 school created and overseen by Stanford University.


Despite Budget Woes, University Still Has Money for Bottled Water

The University of California may be in horrible budget straits, but it still has spent about $2 million in recent years on brand-name bottled water.

National Briefing | Rockies: Wyoming: Ex-Radical Sues Over College Speech

William Ayers filed a federal lawsuit on Thursday against the University of Wyoming over its decision to bar him from speaking there.