Phil Berger
Thom Tillis
President Pro Tempore North Carolina Senate 2007 Legislative Building Raleigh, NC 27601 - (919) 733-5708
Speaker of the House North Carolina House of Representatives 2304 Legislative Building Raleigh, NC 27601 - (919) 733-3451
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 15, 2011
Contacts: Amy Auth (Berger), 919-301-1737 Ray Martin (Berger), 919-301-1740 Jordan Shaw (Tillis), 919-733-
3451
GA leaders call for court clarification on pre-K decision Raleigh, N.C. – To protect taxpayers and the integrity of North Carolina’s pre-kindergarten program, Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger and House Speaker Thom Tillis are requesting clarification from Wake County Superior Court Judge Howard Manning regarding his recent order on pre-kindergarten. Leaders of the General Assembly believe Manning shares their intent to maximize the number of at-risk children in the state’s pre-kindergarten program. The state budget, which took effect July 1, ensures 80 percent of the slots in the program are available to children facing financial hardship – the same as every state budget since 2004. For weeks, General Assembly leaders have urged Gov. Beverly Perdue to seek clarification from the courts. She did not. But Perdue mandated the state create a massive, multi-milliondollar entitlement anyway – a blatantly unconstitutional move that would bust state and local budgets. Perdue and the executive and judiciary branches have no constitutional authority to appropriate taxpayer money without the General Assembly’s approval, according to Article V Section VII of the North Carolina Constitution. “The best way to protect North Carolina’s children and their future is to keep our budget balanced, protect our AAA credit rating, and resist the urge to recklessly spend money we don’t have,” said Berger (R-Rockingham). “We’re doing what Gov. Perdue should have done weeks ago. But rather than govern responsibly, Perdue chose to pick another political fight in a desperate attempt to boost her dismal poll numbers. Our children, and all North Carolinians, need leaders willing to protect our state’s fragile economy – not career politicians who use kids as pawns to win the next election.” Perdue and state agencies insist Manning’s July 18 decision mandated a new pre-kindergarten/