Let the record show that the Blue Ridge Parkway was built under the auspices of the New Deal Works Progress Administration and the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The Decline of North
Carolina
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Every Monday
since April, thousands of North Carolina residents have gathered at the State
Capitol to protest the grotesque damage that a new Republican majority has been
doing to a tradition of caring for the least fortunate. Nearly 700 people have
been arrested in the “Moral Monday” demonstrations, as they are known. But the
bad news keeps on coming from the Legislature, and pretty soon a single day of
the week may not be enough to contain the outrage.
In January,
after the election of Pat McCrory as governor, Republicans took control of both
the executive and legislative branches for the first time since Reconstruction.
Since then, state government has become a demolition derby, tearing down years
of progress in public education, tax policy, racial equality in the courtroom
and access to the ballot.
The cruelest
decision by lawmakers went into effect last week: ending federal unemployment
benefits for 70,000 residents. Another 100,000 will lose their checks in a few
months. Those still receiving benefits will find that they have been cut by a
third, to a maximum of $350 weekly from $535, and the length of time they can
receive benefits has been slashed from 26 weeks to as few as 12 weeks.
The state has
the fifth-highest unemployment rate in the country, and many Republicans
insulted workers by blaming their joblessness on generous benefits. In fact,
though, North Carolina is the only state that has lost long-term federal
benefits, because it did not want to pay back $2.5 billion it owed to Washington
for the program. The State Chamber of Commerce argued that cutting weekly
benefits would be better than forcing businesses to pay more in taxes to pay off
the debt, and lawmakers blindly went along, dropping out of the federal
program.
At the same
time, the state is also making it harder for future generations of workers to
get jobs, cutting back sharply on spending for public schools. Though North
Carolina has been growing rapidly, it is spending less on schools now than it
did in 2007, ranking 46th in the nation in per-capita education dollars. Teacher
pay is falling, 10,000 prekindergarten slots are scheduled to be removed, and
even services to disabled children are being chopped.
“We are losing
ground,” Superintendent June Atkinson said recently, warning of a teacher exodus
after lawmakers proposed ending extra pay for teachers with master’s degrees,
cutting teacher assistants and removing limits on class sizes.
Republicans
repealed the Racial Justice Act, a 2009 law that was the first in the country to
give death-row inmates a chance to prove they were victims of discrimination.
They have refused to expand Medicaid and want to cut income taxes for the rich
while raising sales taxes on everyone else. The Senate passed a bill that would
close most of the state’s abortion clinics.
And,
naturally, the Legislature is rushing to impose voter ID requirements and cut
back on early voting and Sunday voting, which have been popular among Democratic
voters. One particularly transparent move would end a tax deduction for
dependents if students vote at college instead of their hometowns, a blatant
effort to reduce Democratic voting strength in college towns like Chapel Hill
and Durham.
North Carolina
was once considered a beacon of farsightedness in the South, an exception in a
region of poor education, intolerance and tightfistedness. In a few short
months, Republicans have begun to dismantle a reputation that took years to
build.
Meet The New York Times’s Editorial Board »
PUBLISHED JULY 9, 2013
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