Raleigh, July 12—Proposed salary slashes, rated the most
popular official pastime in Raleigh, appeared today to be at least doubtful
enough among the rulers to make them give ear to school leaders all over North
Carolina and they will be here tomorrow to present the other sides to the
advisory budget commission and the council of state.
Must Balance Budget
The solemn session today, precipitated by a recently
published letter of State Treasurer John P. Stedman, considered the suggestions
of Mr. Stedman that the state cut $7 million from its $50 million
appropriations and “balance the budget.” To get this perfect financial
Fairbanks, it is necessary to cut heavily and illegally into the teachers’
salaries, in all state employes’ salaries and wages, then into the
appropriations. This paring has gone along steadily for three years. The 1931
appropriations have been reduced to 70 percent. And the reduction now proposed
takes the total down to 60 percent.
So far, so bad. The public has not cared deeply about it. It
is quite conceivable that the populace can look without weeping upon larger
salary and appropriations cuts. But not until the current conference of the
financiers has the real reason been disclosed. These slashes are not made in
behalf of the terribly over-taxed people but in the interest of North
Carolina’s unimpaired credit. The heavy cuts are to be ordered to make possible
“curtailment” of state obligations and to retire the state’s obligations in the
usual way.
Cut for Teachers
Illegal
The teachers in the state are protected by statute from this
attack on their salaries. The raid upon them must be extra-legal. The state can
temporarily withhold what they have and get legislative sanction for the
proposed cut. The citizens have not become greatly interested in this issue
until right now. But it isn’t anything like so vital as it appeared to be
several days ago. The teacher are to be held up, not because the state cannot
raise the revenue to pay what it has covenanted, but because New York bankers
are demanding “curtailment” on notes and bonds held at a rate of 6 percent.
“Repubiation” has been dropped into the discussions. North
Carolina people are a little sensitive of that subject. When New York makes
demands for money that North Carolina owes for which New York hesitates accept
renewals at 6 percent, the state is warned of the desperate situations. It may
turn out that the state can’t get any more money. New York talks about us and
says we don’t pay our debts. Then the cutting begins. Vox Pop stands by and
says nothing. But until now he has not had a chance to know that these slashes
are not in his own interest….
….
Everybody knows that North Carolina can’t pay its debt
service now, that the United States cannot, that the world cannot. Everybody
knows that if the council of state and the advisory commission decided tomorrow
to cut 20 percent of the salaries and appropriations, that if the $7 million is
saved, this will simply carry North Carolina to the first of the year, perhaps
get a renewal of the notes at a horribly high figure and leave the state
exactly where it is now.
Everybody knows that if salaries are cut in half, the
appropriations in the same ratio, the schools suspended a year or orphaned by
withdrawal of support, the problem has not been solved. North Carolina, which
owes $180 million of its own and $380 million of subdivisional debts, cannot
pay these obligations on present commodity prices.
….
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