Sunday, March 27, 2011

Present and Future


Hector contemplates his situation as a teacher of the future. Things haven't changed from present day, they have become worse. Meanwhile young Hector wants to become a teacher, he is full of enthusiasm, wish him luck.

Budget cuts looming


Hickenlooper is elected as Governor. The coming budget woes are on the horizon. Tax revenues are down, Amendment 23 ends in 2011. Get ready Hector and Sally, changes are coming.

This comic was intended to get out the vote for next month's election. Poor Hector and Sally, they can't vote yet and all the adults who should have voted decided to sit this one out. On a side note the comic is now in color!

Ritter passes gas


In this one Colorado outgoing Governor passes a stinky bit of gas in the form of SB191. This supposed reform law was intended to help the state of Colorado secure the Race To The Top funds. Of course the state did not get the funds, but still gets saddled with this travesty. It will likely be struck down or modified in the coming years. It is a shame that the state will have to spend more money to defend a crappy law. Ritter signed it just before he left office. He signed it even though he had put in place a group to study teacher performance pay and was proceeding in a more thoughtful way. But suddenly RTTT comes along and the Colorado Legislators decide to ram though SB191. Co-sponsored by Chris Romer(D) the bill is a thinly veiled attempt to remove due process rights of teachers and inserts student scores on CSAP into teacher evaluations.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010


This is the editorial for this month. I can't believe that we have to have this fight! The Colorado state senate is totally out of line for trying to take away our due process rights as teachers. This is yet another attack on teachers in the ongoing Republican, conservative effort to ruin public education. Who the hell do they think they are?


Tuesday, March 2, 2010


This editorial pokes fun at the school district's fear of spending down the rather large rainy day fund they have. Only 50 million of that fund is required by law to be saved, and yet there is nearly three times that much.

Monday, February 8, 2010

So, things are pretty bleak in the education field. This is the latest editorial cartoon I created for my teachers union newspaper the JCEA Insight. This year the economic calamity has finally come home to roost in the field of education. Many districts in Colorado will be coming up short on the money side of things thanks to the Colorado legislature and Governor slashing the budget and once more cutting into education. They do this even though voters explicitly told them not to with the passage last year of Amendment 23. It seems to me that government is not doing a good job listening to the voters.