Saturday, March 07, 2015

Ed Emery: My constituents think the same way I do about the issues

(From Sen. Ed Emery, R-Lamar)

We have recorded and tallied responses from a total of 2,326 constituents who returned my recent survey. The most responses (2,294) were received in reply to the question of whether a student should be able to transfer to another district if one better fits their needs. Of those, 68 percent agreed that they should, with 38 percent disagreeing. The lowest number of replies (1,628) came from the question of how Missouri should fund any increase in Medicaid. Medicaid expansion was rejected by 68 percent against the 24 percent in favor, and, if expanded, funding by increasing taxes was preferred by 33 percent; 16 percent of respondents favored cuts in education funding; and 40 percent selected neither but without agreement on another approach. Possibly the reason for the low number of responses on Medicaid funding was the nearly 3 to 1 opposition to any expansion.

Most survey questions supplied five possible choices: strongly agree, somewhat agree, no opinion, somewhat disagree, and strongly disagree. Combining the for and against positions produced the following results:
Eliminating the state income tax , 49 percent for and 39 percent against;
Right-to-Work , 75 percent for and 21 percent against;
Option to transfer to private school, 76 percent for and 18 percent against;
Assigning a letter grade to school buildings, 72 percent for and 18 percent against; and
Eliminating teacher tenure, 76 percent for and 22 percent against.

Much has been made of the 76 percent no vote on Amendment 3 last November, but survey results would suggest that was not a vote in support of tenure.

The other two questions asked whether Missouri entitlements were too high – 48 percent; too low – 15 percent; or about right – 37 percent; and who should be in control of choices regarding a child’s education? Parents, by 77 percent, were selected as the right place for control of education choices with local school boards coming in second at 16 percent. The full survey results will be posted soon on my Senate website. Thank you to all who took time to complete the survey and those who sent additional comments. The survey confirms that we do not all agree on everything, but there was significant agreement on some of the most controversial issues.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mr. Emery, I have an idea for a bill. Every state legislator is required to spend three weeks as a teacher in a struggling schools. I would like for Mr. Emery to become the expert that he claims to be.

Anonymous said...

Was this a scientific survey?

Anonymous said...

It was Ed Emery. He and his type don't believe in science, so it couldn't be a scientific survey. It was done by intelligent design, I'm sure. Ed and his faithful constituents frequently confuse themselves as God.

Anonymous said...

Not all of his constituents! I disagree with him on most issues! Especially when it comes to school vouchers!

Anonymous said...

>>>My constituents think the same way I do<<<

This is the problem.