King is predicting that in four years laptops will continue because it will be that successful. "Iim so confident that this will prove itself to be powerful and important that it will be very difficult to not fund it in the future." The annual cost of $7 million is cheap, he said, considering itis less than one-half percent of every school budget in Maine. It would be difficult for any project "to have this kind of impact" for that amount, the governor said.
The article also discusses how the governor fought for this proposal for two years. Part of the battle was a political one, but part of the battle was also a public perception issue. From the Sun-Journal piece:
Looking back, King said if he could do it over he would present the project differently. He would not have suggested that laptops be given to kids. "For some reason that triggered opposition. And this year as I was talking to legislators, a lot of people still have the impression weire giving a $1,200 gift to 12-year-olds."
If he could announce his proposal again, King would say the program would end the digital divide and transform the way education is delivered, "and by the way weire starting with seventh-graders. That was my idea. But it was a question of how it was originally annunciated." To some citizens it became "a gift of a big, fancy machine to 12-year-olds."
You can find more information on the legislation and the process in the full Sun-Journal article. The Portland Press Herald, another Maine newspaper, also has an article on this development that deals with more of the local issues surrounding the legislation.
Thanks to Robert Leitao (a.k.a. DawnTreader in the TMO forums) for his assistance with this article. For further discussion of this subject, join the thread in our forums.