Executive Report: Cronin criticizesfederal controls


STATE AND LOCAL TAXES account for more than 90 per cent of the dollar outlays for public schools in the United States, but the amount of federal regulation "has increased in ways disproportionate to the amount of federal dollars received," Joseph M. Cronin, state superintendent of education writes in the Phi Delta Kappan (April 1976).

As an example, the new federal handicapped children bill will require "millions of person-hours and dollars . . .just to develop the procedures, personnel systems, and forms to implement the law," he says.

To stop "the federal takeover" he suggests:

1. Educators and board members should request state governors to protest against proliferating reports.

2. State and local leaders should reward congressmen who fought against detailed specifications on how to operate new federal programs.

3. Further program consolidation should be sought.

4. States should either refuse to comply with reports whose merit is questionable or refuse the federal money.

5. States should fund such agencies as the Educational Commission of the States so that they can "search for genuine state options to a federal system."

6. Citizens should press harder for state and local resolution of such problems as sex discrimination, etc., to make federal initiatives unnecessary.

7. Local and state foundations should stimulate constructive proposals that are not on the federal agenda.

8. Universities should initiate centers for the development of state education policy to help states prepare their own solutions to problems.

28/ December 1976/ Illinois Issues


|Home| |Back to Periodicals Available| |Table of Contents| |Back to Illinois Issues 1976|