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Jan 14, 2009 8:58 am US/Eastern
Day 2 Of Hunger Strike Over Education Budget Cuts
DORAL (CBS4) ―
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Parents staged a hunger strike outside Doral's Ronald Reagan High School
CBS
Outraged parents are planning to descend on Wednesday's budget meeting held by Miami-Dade County Public Schools to protest proposed budge cuts.
Miami Dade PTA President Mindy Gould said Wednesday's rally outside the school board's headquarters would be just the beginning.
"We need to take this to Tallahassee. It's not our School Board members; it's not our superintendent," said Gould.
As the rally takes place, two mothers will be on the 2nd day of a hunger strike outside a school in Doral to protest the proposed drastic cuts in the state's education budget.
"Our position is that we can be without food, but we cannot afford not to feed children's minds," said Viviana Salmon, one of the mothers on the hunger strike.
Tuesday their tents and signs were visible outside Ronald Reagan High School, located at 86 hundred NW 107th Avenue.
Student Camille Spencer said she's proud of her mom. "I believe in what she's doing. I think it's important to stand up to what the school board wants to do to the school."
"The message is that we are absolutely desperate," said Salmon. "We are beyond ourselves with concern; we are terrified of what we are leaving as an education for our children. Education, we believe, is what protects children and prepares them for the future, especially now when they are inheriting the economy they are inheriting."
Some parents, like Mark Hart, expressed doubts whether the protest could accomplish its desired goal. He said, "I think it's a little drastic; is it really necessary. I don't think it is."
The protest is called "Mothers For Education Hunger Strike" and are asking the Miami-Dade County school board not to cut electives out of the curriculum, and to also give teachers promised pay raises.
"We don't give up, we can't give up. How can we give up? How can we teach our children to give up?" Viviana Salmon, who has only had bottled water since Monday, says there are other mothers who may join their cause. "Something very bad is happening; we are killing the future by not investing in education."
While School District officials acknowledge the women's arguments, they were protesting the wrong people.
The Miami-Dade County school spokesman John Schuster said the budget cuts come from Tallahassee. He understands the frustration many parents and children have already accommodating nearly $280 million in cuts and in the future, they may have to cut another $80 million from the decimated district.
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