RALEIGH (November 3, 2022) – As you vote in the coming days, we encourage you to back candidates – particularly candidates for the state legislature – who support public education from preschool to grad school.
Before you go to the polls, here are some numbers to bear in mind:
- 4,400 – The number of vacant teaching positions in North Carolina’s K-12 public schools as they opened this fall.
- 11,000 – The number of vacant teacher and staff positions once bus drivers, cafeteria workers, etc., were included.1
- 49th – North Carolina’s rank among the states for the percentage of its GDP it spends on K-12 public schools.2
- 41st – Rank of NC community-college average faculty pay among the states. Lower than Alabama, South Carolina and Mississippi.3
- 3.5% – The percentage raise for community-college, state university and other state employees in the 2022-23 state budget.
- 4.2% – Average percentage raise this year for K-12 public school teachers.
- 8.6% – Rate of inflation when the 2022-23 state budget was adopted in July.4
- 17% – Percentage by which pay for starting teachers in Alabama exceeds starting pay for NC teachers.5
- 34th – North Carolina’s rank in public K-12 average teacher pay in 2020-21.6
- 46,556 – Increase in number of North Carolina children ages 5-17 from 2010-2019.7
- 846 – Number of school buses, at 55 seats per bus, those children would fill.8
- 53% – Percentage of 4-year-olds eligible for NC Pre-K (33,000 children) who did not have access to the program before the pandemic.9
- $30,680 – Median wages of a North Carolina preschool teacher in 2020.
- 40% – Percentage decline in enrollment from 2010-19 in NC community-college early-childhood education programs.10
- $2,900 – Reduction in annual state support for each UNC System student since 2006-07, in constant, inflation-adjusted 2021 dollars.11
- $82.5 million – Amount the NC General Assembly agreed to spend this year on NC Promise, which reduces in-state tuition at four state universities to $500 a semester.12
- 6 – Number of years the UNC Board of Governors has held tuition flat at UNC System schools.13
- $785 million – The amount a judge determined is due the state’s public schools over two years in the 28-year-old Leandro case.14
- $6,524,141,444 – North Carolina’s state budget surplus as it began 2022-23.15
WE NEED TO MAKE EDUCATION A PRIORITY again in North Carolina. So as you head out to vote, please ask yourself whether the candidates you back support better public education in our state.
1 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/09/where-we-stand-underfunded/.
2 https://ncses.nsf.gov/indicators/states/compare-indicators/public-school-expenditures-to-state-gdp.
3 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/10/community-colleges-what-dont-we-get/.
4 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/07/a-pay-cut/.
5 https://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2022/07/07/alabama-is-schooling-north-carolina-on-teacher-pay/#sthash.fiq2rbOC.JdAVHt6H.dpbs/.
6 https://www.bestnc.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Facts-Figures-July-2022.pdf, p. 28.
7 https://www.bestnc.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Facts-Figures-July-2022.pdf, p. 8.
8 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/09/k-12-symptoms-of-lousy-pay/.
9 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/09/nc-pre-k-pay-the-folks-who-teach-our-kids/.
10 https://www.bestnc.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Facts-Figures-July-2022.pdf, p. 18; https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/09/early-childhood-do-what-it-takes/.
11 https://www.bestnc.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Facts-Figures-July-2022.pdf, p. 51; https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/10/unc-system-disinvesting-in-public-universities/.
12 https://www.highereddive.com/news/north-carolina-expands-its-500-tuition-program-will-it-keep-paying-for-it/620355/.
13 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/02/unc-board-keep-tuition-flat-a-sixth-year/.
14 https://hew.aveltsagency.com/2022/09/leandro-time-to-pony-up/.
15 https://www.ncleg.gov/Sessions/2021/Bills/House/PDF/H103v4.pdf, p. 9.
David Genereux says
This is such a great article, I appreciate the web site and the email I got. Looks like you use social media, but is this content also pushed out in the form of op/ed columns in newspapers (NC and/or national), or interviews with TV news stations that could also end up on their web sites? This content deserves the biggest audience possible, thanks for putting this together.
Higher Ed Works says
our content does appear in some newspapers but we are currently planning a bigger effort to reach more rural media.
Julie Lynn Neill says
• $6,524,141.444 in your article needs the period .444 replaced with a comma ,444
thanks for your good articles.
Higher Ed Works says
thank you!