PSEA: Mastriano's education plan 'would likely cut' $12B; eliminate jobs

Aug. 23—WILKES-BARRE — With all the campaigns heating up across Pennsylvania, here are a few items candidates and their supporters are saying about their stance on issues and about their opponents.

PSEA critical of Mastriano's

proposed education plan

A new Pennsylvania State Education Association (PSEA) analysis finds that gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano's education plan would cut public school funding by more than $12 billion annually — resulting in the loss of nearly 119,000 jobs and more than doubling teacher-to-student ratios in classrooms statewide.

"Cutting funding by more than $12 billion would absolutely devastate Pennsylvania's public schools," said PSEA President Rich Askey. "Doug Mastriano's plan is completely irresponsible, a violation of the state constitution, and an insult to the 1.7 million students who learn in our public schools."

During a March 2022 radio interview on WRTA in Altoona, Mastriano said that Pennsylvania should reduce per-student school funding from an annual average of more than $19,000 today to just $9,000 or $10,000, per-student funding levels unseen in Pennsylvania in more than two decades.

PSEA estimated the statewide impacts on public schools if Mastriano were to fund each student at $9,000 in state funding annually, while eliminating all local school property taxes, as he has proposed. The estimate assumes local non-property taxes and federal funding would remain untouched.

PSEA's analysis found:

Funding for public school districts, charter schools, intermediate units, and career and technical centers would decrease by $12.75 billion, or 33%.

School districts alone would see a total cut of $11 billion.

More than 118,700 jobs would be lost in public school districts, charter schools, intermediate units, and career and technical centers — a drop of 49% in employment.

The student-to-teacher ratio would more than double in public schools.

Details of the estimated impacts on Pennsylvania school districts, charter schools, career and technical centers, and intermediate units can be found at www.psea.org/mastrianocuts.

"Sen. Mastriano would set the clock back 20 years on public education in Pennsylvania," Askey said. "Student programs would be eliminated, educators would be laid off, and class sizes would go through the roof.

"One thing this proposal would accomplish: School districts wouldn't have to worry about staffing shortages anymore. They'd be too busy laying off educators and support staff, increasing class sizes, eliminating sports, and curtailing other programs."