This story originally published online at NC Newsline.

State Republicansโ€™ failure to reach agreement on the budget is โ€œinexcusableโ€ and โ€œirresponsibleโ€ and will negatively impact North Carolinaโ€™s school children and educators, a group of Durham Democratic lawmakers said on Monday.

Durhamโ€™s legislative delegation took part in a series of statewide press conferences held to highlight the state of public schools as most students who attend traditional calendar schools prepare to return to classrooms. Thousands of year-round students are already in school.

The state budget is 45 days late and House Speaker Tim Moore has said lawmakers wonโ€™t likely have a budget in place until sometime after Labor Day, said Rep. Marcia Morey, a Durham Democrat.

โ€œWeek after week this summer, we [Democrats] have been ready to go in and to do the work and to vote, but the Republican leadership has decided that their far away vacations and conferences are more important,โ€ Morey said โ€œThis has got to stop.โ€

Without a state budget, Morey said educators canโ€™t budget personal finances. Gov. Roy Cooperโ€™s budget proposal and House and Senate spending plans all contain teacher pay raises.

โ€œHow do educators plan their own finances when they donโ€™t know what their salaries will be?โ€ Morey said.

Durhamโ€™s legislative delegation was joined by several local school board members and educators during their morning press conference in downtown Durham. Similar events were scheduled throughout the state.

Rep. Zack Hawkins, a Duham Democrat, said that underfunded schools impact academic outcomes. Teachers must be paid well and given adequate resources to educate children, Hawkins said.

โ€œThey [teachers] canโ€™t bring to life science and math and all the things that theyโ€™re [children] are expected to learn, they canโ€™t bring those things to life if they donโ€™t have what they need,โ€ said Hawkins, a former teacher.

Sen. Mike Woodard, a Durham Democrat, said that the stateโ€™s Republican leadership continues to disinvest in public education.

โ€œThis General Assembly has continued now a dozen years of disinvestment in our public education system, whether itโ€™s through vouchers, whether itโ€™s through failing to invest in our capital needs or whether its failure to invest in our most important infrastructure in our schools, which is our people,โ€ said Woodard, who recently announced plans to run for Durham mayor.

Woodard said that expanding the school voucher program to allow access to the stateโ€™s wealthiest families will take more funding from public schools to hand over to largely unregulated private schools.

โ€œThey [Republicans] forget to tell you when the talk about choice with their voucher program is how many tens of millions of dollars go unused,โ€ Woodard said. โ€œFamilies arenโ€™t using these things because what they realize is that vouchers sound good until you qualify for it and take it to a private school and find out that it only pays a small portion of the schoolโ€™s tuition.โ€

A family can receive up to nearly $7,000 to send a child to a private school under the income-based Opportunity Scholarship program.

Woodard criticized Republican leaders for their failure to adequately fund school capital needs, particularly in rural counties that lack the tax base to pay for building needs with local money.

โ€œChildren cannot learn when their rooms are hot, cold, leaky or dirty,โ€ Woodard said.

The press conference comes two days before lawmakers return to Raleigh to take up several key pieces of controversial Republican-backed education legislation vetoed by Gov. Roy Cooper.

Rep. Vernetta Alston, a Durham Democrat, said local teachers worry that they canโ€™t afford to stay in the profession.

โ€œThey say they simply canโ€™t afford to stay in the career that they love and that staying requires them to take on more work and administrative roles than they were hired or trained to do in order to get the raises that they have already more than earned,โ€ Alston said.

Minnie Forte-Brown, a former Durham school board chairwoman, said that itโ€™s clear that educating children is no longer a priority for North Carolina.

โ€œWe need to do something that shows people that if you donโ€™t care about our children, weโ€™re going to show you that you need to,โ€ Forte-Brown said. โ€œTeachers in North Carolina have been at the bottom for so long that it doesnโ€™t make sense.โ€

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