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Editorial: The low fruit is already picked

School trustees have every right to be angered by Premier Christy Clark鈥檚 comment that the budget cuts her government has ordered can be achieved by picking 鈥渓ow-hanging fruit.

School trustees have every right to be angered by Premier Christy Clark鈥檚 comment that the budget cuts her government has ordered can be achieved by picking 鈥渓ow-hanging fruit.鈥

It鈥檚 one thing to keep pushing for more efficiencies and frugality; it鈥檚 quite another to imply that school districts, which have been struggling with tight budgets for years, have overlooked easy and obvious savings.

That鈥檚 what 鈥渓ow-hanging fruit鈥 means, those things that are within easy reach and require the least effort. It鈥檚 an expression described by one business magazine writer as 鈥渢he uncouth phrase of mid-level managers and meddling consultants.鈥

The premier told reporters Wednesday that taxpayers want to see greater efficiency from school boards. Perhaps, but taxpayers want efficiency from all levels of government. They want to see their tax dollars used properly and not wasted.

But they also want good services; they want a sound education for their children. Most, despite concerns over government waste, know that schools, teachers and administrators can鈥檛 be had for nothing.

While we鈥檙e bandying words about, let鈥檚 examine 鈥渆fficiency.鈥 A car going down the highway while achieving a fuel consumption of 70 miles a gallon is efficient. But if it鈥檚 going the wrong direction, it鈥檚 not effective. School districts can become more 鈥渆fficient鈥 by simply lopping staff and services, but effectiveness will diminish accordingly.

Clark seems to hint that school-district offices are hiding laggards and goldbrickers, noting that 鈥渢here is no reason that in the back office 鈥 the part that has nothing to do with delivering educational programs on a local level 鈥 there鈥檚 no reason we can鈥檛 find savings there.鈥

If school districts are employing people or operating programs that have nothing to do with education, we want to know about it. If the premier knows of such cases, she should be specific, rather than making vague allusions.

Perhaps the Ministry of Education should do a detailed study of school-district operations to determine best practices, to see where savings could be achieved. Then Clark could say: 鈥淲e want you to rein in costs, and we have figured out how you can do it and we will help you.鈥 That would be better than the top-down approach, which appears to be: 鈥淲e want you to cut costs and we don鈥檛 care how you do it.鈥

The premier suggests school districts do such things as share services to save money, another 鈥渓ow-hanging fruit鈥 sort of a suggestion. Teresa Rezansoff, president of the sa国际传媒 School Trustees鈥 Association, says that is already happening. Districts already work closely together, she said, to save money on such things as MSP premiums, higher electricity bills and salary increases. Some districts share secretary-treasurers, she said, and others join forces to buy goods and services.

鈥淚t鈥檚 inaccurate to say that we haven鈥檛 already been doing this stuff and it doesn鈥檛 reflect the reality in school districts,鈥 Rezansoff said.

One way to save costs would be to amalgamate some school districts. That鈥檚 nothing new 鈥 in 1945, hundreds of the province鈥檚 districts were consolidated into 77; more mergers in 1996 left us with 60. Yet Clark is loath to go that route 鈥渂ecause local school boards listen to local communities and reflect those local priorities.鈥

They might listen to local concerns, but there鈥檚 little they can do 鈥 the premier and her predecessors have so narrowed the mandates of school districts that they have little meaningful power left. They have no role in negotiations with teachers, no say on property taxes and little impact on curriculum design.

The province holds all the real power. It should use that power to help school districts reach higher. The low-hanging fruit was picked a long time ago.