Daily Archives: May 12, 2009

Letters to the Editor — School Finance (and the QEO)

image-letter-to-the-editor-stampMany good letters to the editor in response to a recentWisconsin State Journal editorial.

QEO repeal alone would make situation worse

In 1993, Wisconsin adopted a “temporary” formula for funding public schools based on revenue caps, the QEO and a promise of two-thirds funding for education from the state.

Revenue caps and the QEO were set at levels that did not foresee today’s health care and energy costs, or the increasing percentages of students needing services such as special education. State funding falls farther behind the two-thirds goal every year. And under the current budget proposal, we would lose the QEO as well. Revenue caps left alone will not support schools. It will crush them.

It’s time for state government, which created this situation, to take responsibility for solving it. We need a sustainable education system, one that balances the needs of students, teachers and taxpayers.

Simply repealing the QEO will make the situation worse, not better.

— Sherri Swartz, Madison

Today’s schools funded using obsolete system

When I retired in 2006 after a total of over 33 years teaching, 26 of them here, I was earning $47,092, with a master’s degree plus 16 graduate credits, on a pay scale which went no higher than 13 years of experience.

This represents a small annual increase during those 26 years over the equivalent pay scale when I started in 1980 ($18,675).

In what other profession requiring a master’s degree would you expect people to work at those salary rates?

The QEO mandates 3.8 percent. But double digit inflationary increases in health insurance costs eat up most of that.

School districts can’t keep up by financing education mainly with property tax increases. We are trying to pay for education with a horse-and-buggy system. In the 21st century, this simply won’t work. Boomer-aged teachers are retiring, and few young people wanting to survive financially would consider entering such a poorly paid profession.

If you want good teachers, revamp the whole system and control health costs.

— Kay Ziegahn, Richland Center

QEO and revenue caps bad way to fund schools

The QEO does not rise with the cost of living, so teachers are being paid less and less every year. This is unfair, especially for those who have been teaching the longest.

And the revenue caps have caused a lot of damage as well. Several towns have closed schools because they no longer have enough money to run them. Other towns have cut out their sports programs.

And here in Madison, teachers have retired early so younger teachers won’t have to lose their jobs. Programs and courses have been cut, and there is less money for supplies. Computers cannot be upgraded, so they are too slow in some schools.

If we are to keep up with schools around the world, we must eliminate the QEO and the revenue caps. We must fund our schools.

— Genie Ogden, Madison

Reconsider America’s public school concept

As an educator in the public schools, I wonder why it seems like this is a panic. The QEO has been in place since 1993, and this is Gov. Jim Doyle’s second term. There should have been plenty of time to evaluate the QEO and the revenue caps, as well as comparing these to other states.

Wisconsin is not alone in struggling to fund public schools. You can blame it on our “rich” health care benefits, although I’ve never heard GHC referred to as “rich.” Maybe addressing the portion of health care would be reasonable. But Wisconsin cannot expect to attract and keep good teachers if wage increases don’t even come close to the rate of inflation.

People should be reminded that educators not only have a minimum of one degree but must also pay for six credits to maintain the five-year license that we pay for.

It may also be time for states and the Department of Education to revisit the notion of public schools and how to best prepare tomorrow’s workforce. Cutting programs, increased class sizes, fewer technological resources and closed schools is not the answer to funding education.

— Dawn Nonn, Madison

Isn’t it amazing how concerned citizens can so clearly see the need for comprehensive school finance reform, yet our elected leaders seem to be wearing blinders.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, Contracts, education, Elections, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

A Message to State Officials — My Budget Letter

Madison May Day Rally 2009, photo Dace Zeps, click on image for more information.

Madison May Day Rally 2009, photo Dace Zeps, click on image for more information.

There are lots of ways to get a message to elected officials.  You can march and rally, like many of us did on May Day in support of a variety of causes and many more of us will on June 16 to call for long-overdue school funding reform.  You can testify at a hearing like the supporters of the School Finance Network did recently.  You can visit their offices and you can always send a letter.

Here is the letter I sent today.

Governor James Doyle

State Senator Fred Risser

State Representative Mark Pocan

State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708

Dear Sirs

As work on Wisconsin’s biennial budget moves forward, you and your colleagues face increasingly difficult choices.  The current economic crisis and the difficulties you face demand real leadership.

This crisis — in the public and private sectors, at the national, state and local levels – is the product of too many years of looking for quick and easy fixes and savings.  The gimmicks have been exhausted, the savings have been proven illusionary, and the short term view has wrought extensive damage.

It is time to champion a new vision.  Wisconsin needs you to lead the state in a recommitment to a sustainable and progressive system of revenues sufficient to provide the investments in education, social services, health care, and infrastructure necessary for Wisconsin to grow stronger, more prosperous and more equitable.

The Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and the Institute for Wisconsin’s Future have produced a Catalog of Tax Reform Options for Wisconsin.  This document offers many ideas for fair and sustainable revenue policies.  I urge you to put these ideas at the center of your continuing work on the budget.

I am an active citizen, member and supporter of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.  I have volunteered and donated and even hosted a “Take Back the Assembly” fundraiser in the last election cycle.  I’ve done this because I believed in the Democratic platform planks promising “fair taxation,” full funding of educational mandates, and “access to affordable health care,” and more.  These are the ideas that put you into office.  Now, more than ever you need to put these ideas into action.

As we all look forward to the next election cycle, it may be helpful to think about how difficult it will be to hold on to majorities and offices if all you have to offer is “We survived the economic crisis without too much harm and no fundamental changes in our approach to governance.”  Propping up the status quo also contains risks, but it offers few rewards for the citizens or the Democratic Party.  Change was the watchword last November and the increasingly apparent failures of the old way of doing things have only made the demand for change more pressing.

You are in a position to lead that change.  Please be part of building the future our state needs.

Thomas J. Mertz

Send your own letter (info here, feel free to post it in the comments); join the march and rally on June 16!  Take action!

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, Elections, finance, Local News, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

WAES School-Funding Update, the Week of May 11, 2009

waesgraphic

Click on the image to visit the Wisconsin Alliance for Excelent Schools

From the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools.  Headlines/index below, click here for a pdf of the full update, click on the linked items for related posts on AMPS

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, Pope-Roberts/Breske Resolution, School Finance, Take Action

School Budget Talk — Gov. Doyle and Sup. Nerad and Others

From WKOW, Channel 27, Madison.

Nobody seems to be saying much about what was discussed, but the little that is being said doesn’t sound good.  In fact, it sounds like Governor Doyle is looking for some cover for his previously expressed opinion that “cuts to education..will be necessary.”

Governor Doyle is wrong.  Cuts instead of investments are both unwise and unnecessary.  In these times of economic crisis, Wisconsin needs bold leadership in order to set a new path toward growth.  It would be a huge mistake to continue along the unsustainable “quick fix,” “no new taxes,” road that brought our state and our nation to the edge of collapse and puts our children’s future at risk.

Let your elected officials know that you would support moving Wisconsin in a new and better direction.

Thomas J. Mertz

2 Comments

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized