Orange County NC Website
13 <br />NCACC Public Education Policy Statement <br />Introduction <br />The Association believes that every child should have equal access to a sound basic education designed <br />to prepare students for successful living, work and good citizenship in a modern society. Recognizing <br />that the responsibility for public education in our country is that of the states, the Association believes <br />that adequate state resources must ensure a sound basic education for all North Carolina children. We <br />believe that improved public education is imperative to the future of North Carolina's citizens, and we <br />encourage the state to place higher priority on increased support for the necessary improvements to <br />compete in an increasingly global and technologically complex business environment. <br />The Association supports a continued federal role in the funding of educational services. The Association <br />further believes that citizen control of public schools is essential to guarantee continued widespread <br />understanding and support for this major responsibility of government: the education of its people. The <br />Association acknowledges and accepts the traditional responsibility of boards of county commissioners <br />to provide adequate facilities in which to meet our students' need for a sound basic education. <br />Clarifying State and County Financial Responsibility <br />The Association recognizes the importance of new approaches to education in the effort to improve our <br />public schools. New classroom technologies and such innovations as the NC Virtual Public School, Early <br />college High Schools, alternative schools, and charter schools are intended to introduce greater choice <br />into the state's public education system. When the General Assembly authorizes changes to introduce <br />greater choice and/or improve education, these changes and flexibilities should be equally available to <br />all existing public schools. <br />The Association will support efforts by state policy makers that, in the view of county commissioners, <br />will lead to substantive improvements in the state-supported basic elementary and secondary education <br />programs available to the children of North Carolina. Elementary and secondary public education should <br />be a clear priority to ensure that North Carolina citizens are well served by our schools. <br />The state should define and support a sound basic education in all local school systems and appropriate <br />adequate operating funds to fully fund its education initiatives with revenue that is earmarked to pay <br />the costs of those initiatives. The state should fund programs that continue to engage young people, <br />provide individualized options that eliminate arbitrary barriers and provide students a range of <br />opportunities through which they can gain the credentials, skills and education they need to function in <br />the modern economy of the 21st century. <br />The division of responsibility between the state and counties for financing public school needs, which <br />was established by the General Assembly in 1933, became blurred during the years that followed. The <br />Association supports efforts to clarify state and county responsibility through legislation that reflects <br />and recognizes the following realities: <br />the rightful guarantee of equal access to high quality basic education opportunities for every <br />child in North Carolina; <br />the limitation of county government revenue sources and the need for additional sources of <br />revenue at the county level; <br />• the impacts of changing technologies on basic educational needs and the job market in the <br />future; <br />