Governor Deval Patrick unveils ambitious new education plan; raises possibility of tax hike — again
Governor Deval Patrick today unveiled an ambitious education plan that would pump more money into improving education for everyone from the smallest children to college students.
Asked how he would pay for the plan, which he estimated would eventually cost $1 billion a year, he raised the possibility that the state’s citizens would be asked to pay higher taxes. “We gotta stop being afraid of that converstation,” he said after a news conference unveiling the education proposal at a Boston school.
It was the second day in a row that the governor had raised the possibilty of increased taxes. On Monday he launched a public campaign to win support for $1.02 billion a year in new or higher taxes and fees to repair and reinvigorate the state transportation system.
The plan calls for providing universal access to high-quality early education for children from birth to age 5. It also calls for fully funding K-12 education, allowing extended school days in high-need schools, making college more accessible and affordable, and allowing community colleges to expand efforts to provide skills needed in the workplace.
“This is about creating opportunity and economic growth. After twenty years of good work and experience at reforming education, we know what works,” Patrick said in a statement. “If we are going to accelerate our growth and create opportunity, we must invest.”
The plan would cost $550 million in the first year and its annual cost would increase to nearly $1 billion over the next four years, the governor’s office said.
The investments, the governor’s office said, would fuel the state’s continued efforts to “build a 21st century public education system in Massachusetts that prepares all students to compete and succeed in the global marketplace.”
On the beat

Columnist Adrian Walker says UMass Dartmouth is shaken after revelations that one of the Marathon bomb suspects was a student there. Read more
|
|
Recent posts
- Two shot on Bowdoin Street in Dorchester
- Boston police charge 75 after raids targeting alleged gang members and associates in Roxbury
- City to spend $13.75m to pave 45 miles of Boston’s streets this summer season
- US Attorney Carmen Ortiz rallies women business leaders
- Braintree police credit Amber Alert with quick, safe end to parental kidnapping case



Editor's Choice

'You will run again,' Obama tells shaken Boston

For Boston, a time to heal, a time to play hockey
- Amid capital splendor, Warren gets prefab perch
- Down with those paper tax forms
- Prepping for jobs in the casino economy
- Hospital charges bring a backlash

LOCAL BLOGS
Universal Hub
The Chinatown Blog
CommonWealth Magazine
Red Mass Group
Blue Mass Group
Boston 1775
The 1851 Chronicle
The Berkeley Beacon
The Daily Collegian
The Daily Free Press
The Harvard Crimson
The Heights
The Huntington News
The Suffolk Journal
The Tech
The Tufts Daily







