Category Archives: AMPS

Beth Moss discusses the district’s budget dilemma

School Board candidate Beth Moss appeared on WORT this morning to discuss the difficult budgeting issues facing the district due to the state’s QEO/Budget Cap squeeze. Tony Castañeda was the interviewer and you can hear it here.

Robert Godfrey

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Contact Info for Joint Finance Committee Members

SENATE

Co-Chair, Senator Russell Decker (D-29)

323 South, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-2502
Fax: (608) 267-9027
E-mail: Sen.Decker@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Schofield
Counties: Marathon, Price, Rusk, Taylor, Portage, Sawyer, Shawano

Vice-Chair, Senator David Hansen (D-30)
319 South, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-5670
Fax: (608) 267-6791
E-mail: Sen.Hansen@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Green Bay
Counties: Brown, Marinette, Oconto, Shawano

Senator Robert Jauch (D-25)
130 South, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-3510
Fax: (608) 266-3580
E-mail: Sen.Jauch@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Poplar
Counties: Ashland, Bayfield, Barron, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Sawyer, Washburn

Senator John Lehman (D-21)
303 West, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-1832
Fax: (608) 267-6793
E-mail: Sen.Lehman@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Racine
County: Racine

Senator Mark Miller (D-16)
106 South, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-9170
Fax: (608) 266-5087
E-mail: Sen.Miller@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Monona
Counties: Dane, Columbia, Sauk

Senator Lena Taylor (D-4)
3 South, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-5810
Fax: (608) 267-2353
E-mail: Sen.Taylor@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Milwaukee
County: Milwaukee

Senator Alberta Darling (R-8)
317 East, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-5830
Fax: (608) 267-0588
E-mail: Sen.Darling@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: River Hills
Counties: Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Washington, Waukesha

Senator Luther Olsen (R-14)
9 West, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-7882
Phone: (608) 266-8077
Fax: (608) 282-3641
Email: Sen.Olsen@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Ripon
Counties: Mostly: Green Lake, Marquette, Waupaca, Waushara, Also: Adams, Columbia, Fond du Lac, Outagamie, Sauk, Shawano

Assembly
Co-Chair, Representative Kitty Rhoades (R-30)
321 East, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8953
Phone: (608) 266-1526
Fax: (608) 282-3630
E-mail: Rep.Rhoades@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Hudson
Counties: Pierce, St. Croix

Vice Chair, Representative Dan Meyer (R-34)
306 East, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8953
Phone: (608) 266-7141
Fax: (608) 282-3634
E-mail: Rep.Meyer@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Eagle River
Counties: Oneida, Vilas

Representative Steve Kestell (R-27)
17 West, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8952
Phone: (608) 266-8530
Fax: (608) 282-3627
E-mail: Rep.Kestell@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Elkhart Lake
County: Calumet, Sheboygan, Manitowoc

Representative Jeff Stone (R-82)
320 East, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8953
Phone: (608) 266-8590
Fax: (608) 282-3682
E-mail: Rep.Stone@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Greenfield
County: Milwaukee

Representative Scott Suder (R-69)
21 North, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8953
Phone: (608) 267-0280
Fax: (608) 282-3669
E-mail: Rep.Suder@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Abbotsford
Counties: Mostly: Clark, Marathon, Also: Chippewa, Eau Claire, Wood

Representative Robin Vos (R-63)
304 North, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53707-8953
Phone: (608) 266-9171
Fax: (608) 282-3663
E-mail: Rep.Vos@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Burlington
County: Racine

Representative Pedro Colon (D-8)
104 North, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8952
Phone: (608) 267-7669
Fax: (608) 282-3608
E-mail: Rep.Colon@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Milwaukee
County: Milwaukee

Representative Mark Pocan (D-78)
322 West, State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708-8953
Phone: (608) 266-8570
Fax: (608) 282-3678
E-mail: Rep.Pocan@legis.state.wi.us
Hometown: Madison
County: Dane

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Testify on School Funding!

Please consider testifying or submitting written testimony at the series of upcoming Joint Finance Committee hearings. The 16-member bi-partisan Joint Finance Committee (Madison legislators Mark Miller and Mark Pocan are members) is the primary legislative committee responsible for appropriations and expenditures. They are the ones who take the Governor’s budget and make changes, then submit it to the Legislature.

Scheduled hearings are:

* Tuesday, March 20, 2007 from 10:30 am to 4:30 pm at the UW-Milwaukee
Student Union,Wisconsin Room, 2200 E. Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee.
* Wednesday, March 21, 2007 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm at the Arlington
Agricultural Research Station Public Events Facility, N695 Hopkins Rd.,
Arlington.
* Tuesday, March 27, 2007 from Noon to 5:00 pm at the Chippewa Falls
County Courthouse, Assembly Room, 711 N. Bridge St., Chippewa Falls.
* Wednesday, April 4, 2007 from Noon to 5:00 pm at the Prairie du Chien
High School Auditorium, 800 E. Crawford St., Prairie du Chien.
* Wednesday, April 11, 2007 from Noon to 5:00 pm at the Nicolet College
Learning Resource Center Theatre, 5634 College Dr., Rhinelander.
* Thursday, April 12, 2007 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm at the National
Railroad Museum Lenfestey Center, 2285 South Broadway, Green Bay.

Tips for testifying:

 Don’t just talk about problems: say what you want. In this situation, that the Legislature keep its promise of two-thirds funding for public education in Wisconsin.
 Arrive 15-20 minutes early if you can to register.
 If you bring your children, alert staff. They MIGHT bump you up in line.
 Prepare to wait several hours or more to testify. This is NOT a fair process: oftentimes lobbyists and “friends” of legislators get to go first.
 Bring enough copies of your testimony to give to each member and leave with staff.
 Make eye contact, smile and try to converse, rather than just reading.
 Tell at least one personal story (short) about how school funding shortages have impacted your children or better yet, your community.
 Keep testimony to a single type-written page (about 3 minutes: they’ll cut you off).
 If you can’t stay to testify, leave a copy of your comments with your name, address and phone with staff there.
 Consider registering as a panel (that way you all get to come up together and testify).
 Try to get other schools and families across the state to testify. Efforts are most effective when the legislators hear from people at EVERY SINGLE HEARING.

If you can’t get to a hearing, send testimony to Joint Finance Members:

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MMSD BOE School Finance Advocacy Session

From Arlene Silveira, Communications Committee Chair

TJM

All – the Communications Committee of the BOE is holding an informational/advocacy meeting on March 29. Details are attached.

This is the first in a series for meetings. The next meeting will focus on advocacy efforts for the state funding system.

All are welcome to attend, actively participate and ADVOCATE!

Arlene Silveira

“Thursday, March 29, at 6:30 p.m. in the McDaniels Auditorium of the Doyle Administration Building. The meeting will provide you with information about the budget and advocacy “talking points” to contact legislators and gain support for some of the budget’s provisions.”

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We Are Not Alone #3

Actually on this one we are kind of alone. I don’t believe our PTOs have ever engaged in this sort of advocacy. I do know that on the state issues one of the most difficult constituencies for WAES to mobilize has been the PTOs.

TJM

From Horicon:

Members in attendance at Tuesday night’s meeting of the Horicon Parent Teacher Organization volunteered to call electors of the Horicon School District urging them to go to the polls on Tuesday, April 3.

District electors will be asked at that time to approve or reject a referendum asking that “the school district budget be permitted to exceed the revenue limit by up to $400,000 for the 2007-2008 school year, and $350,000 for each school year from 2008 to 2012. Funds will be used for upgrading aging technology hardware and software, maintaining instructional programs, maintaining facilities, providing secure buildings, and meeting the operating expense requirements incurred when properly operating the educational facilities of the district. The purpose of this resolution is non-recurring as it will only be authorized for five years.”

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What EXACTLY has MMSD had to cut since enactment of State Revenue Caps in 1993?

Is there a list you may wonder. Yes, a list exists–a LONG one! MMSD’s budget cuts have been documented since 1993.
See this list here

Janet Morrow

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Revenue Caps in 2003 Then School Board Member Ray Allen Predicts the Future

Taxpayers Here Foot Lion’s Share Of Bill For School Mandates
The Capital Times :: EDITORIAL :: 9A
Wednesday, December 3, 2003
Ray Allen

Property tax bills will soon be in the mailboxes of Madison property owners. Over the last year, much has been written and said about property taxes in Wisconsin. The issue is complex and one that merits scrutiny by state policy-makers. Who pays and how much they pay are good starting points. But an equally important question is, what are people paying for?
As members of Gov. Jim Doyle’s Task Force on Educational Excellence begin to examine these and other questions about funding schools, it is critical that they look at the burden placed on school district budgets due to under-funded mandates. Both the state and federal governments direct local governments to provide an array of services and, unfortunately, often times the money doesn’t meet the mandate. Since 1993, when schools began operating under the state-imposed revenue limit law (the state restricts the amount of revenue a district can raise fromthe local property tax levy), Madison schools have cut nearly $28 million from budgets and eliminated nearly 300 positions. Each year over the last decade, the Board of Education diligently worked to keep cuts from the classroom. Increasingly, that has become extremely difficult.

Financial support for our schools from different sources dwindled or was eliminated during the last decade.

In the mid-1990s, the city of Madison modified its student transportation partnership with the district, resulting in higher costs for the school district. The district paid an additional $311,617 last year for transportation costs no longer supplemented by the city.

From 1993 to 1995, the district received over $400,000 from the University of Wisconsin to offset the loss of revenue to the school district from the tax-exempt Eagle Heights apartments, the residence for married students. After two years, the university discontinued the supplement, which is now borne by our property taxpayers.

Two huge underfunded mandates are particularly troublesome for Madison property taxpayers — state and federally mandated special education and English as a second language programs. The special education budget for the current school year is $56.9 million. Of that total, $3,865,000 (less than 7 percent of the total budget) is federal grants/entitlements. Thus, the remainder of the district’s special education budget — $53,054,019 — is paid by the state and Madison property taxpayers.

But the state has frozen the amount of money available to Wisconsin school districts for special education, and prorates payments to districts at about 30 percent of costs, or $17.9 million for Madison. The bottom line is that Madison property taxpayers pick up 66 percent ($35.1 million) of the costs for this mandate!

Equally vexing for local property taxpayers is the bilingual/English as a second language mandate. In the past three school district budgets, nearly 60 positions have been added to handle skyrocketing enrollment. For the 2001-02 school year the ESL budget was $7.2 million; it is $12.4 million for the current school year — a 72 percent increase. The federal government reimbursement to the district is $185,000, the state $965,000 — a combined $1.15 million, about 9 percent of the total ESL budget.

Last year the state reimbursed school districts at about 14 percent of costs, and the reimbursement will probably drop below 13 percent this year due to increasing enrollments statewide and a frozen state reimbursement allocation. Madison property taxpayers are picking up more than $11 million –over 90 percent — of the ESL mandate.

* The underfunded mandate costs are huge for our property taxpayers — over $46 million in just special education and ESL costs, about 15 percent of the district’s entire budget. Anyone who is serious about helping reduce the burden of school costs on property taxpayers has to fund these mandates. Otherwise, in Madison, our property taxpayers will continue to foot the bill.

Posted by Janet Morrow

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Revenue Caps in 1996 Predicting the Future

Madison Metropolitan School District
Superintendent Cheryl H. Wilhoyte
1996-97 Budget Message
May 6, 1996

http://www.madison.k12.wi.us/cso/news/95-96/message.htm

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While we await spring each year in Madison, we have the MMSD operating budget to mark the season. I am pleased to present to you this evening my recommendations for the 1996-97 budget for Madison’s schools.
I have to say that at least in one respect I am more pleased than usual to present the budget because this proposed budget reduces our property tax levy by nearly $16 million. This 9% decrease in school property taxes will result in a tax cut of about $200 on the property tax bill of the average homeowner in Madison. It is not often a superintendent gets to deliver that kind of news.

Since 1992, I have been actively lobbying for changes in the way schools are financed in Wisconsin. Far too much of the burden of paying for schools has been placed on the shoulders of local property taxpayers, especially in a community like Madison which has received only a fraction of the state aid other communities have received.

This budget reflects the payoff for the countless hours we’ve invested pressing for school finance reform. Our successful advocacy means Madison will receive a more equitable share of state school aids. This additional state aid along with the small increase in our budget will result in significant — and long overdue — property tax relief.

This recommended budget calls for an increase in per student spending of only 1.9% — well under the current inflation rate.

At a time when our schools are challenged to meet the increasingly varied needs of a more diverse student population, this is a budget that does not allow us to do all that we need to do. And at a time when schools must move swiftly from what can literally be described as the Stone Age — the slate chalkboard era — to the new high-tech world of the “Cyberschool,” this is not a budget that allows us to move as fast as we need to move.

With a budget this tight, we’ll have to do without in some areas. I’ve made many cuts … cuts that no superintendent wants to make…. Under this budget, for example, we cannot continue our full summer school program. Our budget for text material purchases is frozen again this year, and with 360 more students to accommodate our ability to keep up with the rapid pace of change in the area of instructional materials will be further eroded. The budget does include a $500,000 increase for building maintenance, but leaves a critical need in the area of maintenance that cannot be met with current operating budget resources. Both staff and the Blue Ribbon Panel have focused on the additional $7-9 million yearly expenditure that is needed to adequately safeguard our half-billion dollar investment in school facilities.

The decisions that have been made in areas like summer school and the budget for instructional materials are far from desirable educationally, but in my judgment they are necessary. When our overall budget can increase only 1.9% per student, we have to set careful priorities. The many difficult decisions that have been made in putting together this budget enable us to maintain our longstanding commitment to small class sizes, and there is no more important investment we can make. And we will be able to move aggressively on school restructuring at La Follette and Midvale-Lincoln with the implementation of our new learning standards to position our schools, students and graduates for the 21st Century.

We also are able to bring full-day kindergarten to more schools, and as we’ve explained before, we can accommodate the additional expense within the state revenue limit without making corresponding reductions in other areas of the budget. The even better news is that in the long run the added cost of expanded full-day kindergarten will be paid for with higher aid payments from the state, so we won’t add a dime to our local property tax bills for the extra full-day kindergarten.

This is the fourth year our budget is limited by the revenue cap imposed on local school districts by the State of Wisconsin. The cap certainly has taken a toll, as evidenced by reductions in services such as summer school, but you need to be aware that the cap’s true long-term impact is only just beginning to be felt. As this chart shows, the gap between what we are allowed to raise in revenue and the cost of continuing current services will widen in the years to come, reaching $3 million by 1998 and well over $6 million by the turn of the century.

A troubling factor not captured on this chart is the potential effect of student enrollment trends. The budget projection depicted on the chart is based on the assumption that enrollment will remain stable. The trouble is that our current enrollment projections indicate that enrollment will begin to decline in 1998. Declining enrollment will result in an even tighter revenue limit, further widening the gap between how much revenue we will have and how much we will need just to maintain our current level of service, to say nothing about future needs in areas like technology and facility maintenance.

This proposed budget allocates resources only for next school year, but as the Board, our staff and our community review the many policy decisions that make up this budget, I encourage you not to confine your thinking to 1996-97. We need to be thinking long-term, and we need to be asking ourselves perplexing questions that must be answered if our schools are to be well-positioned for the 21st Century.

We need to discuss as a community — and as a state, really — what to do about the fact that the state revenue cap limits the increase in our revenue to 2.9% while the state law pegs increases in salaries and benefits for teachers and administrators at 3.8%. With the widening budget gap I’ve described, we are on a course that is simply not sustainable.

One of four things has to happen:

The revenue limit has to be raised…

The salary cap has to be lowered…

We have to accept that personnel costs will continue to eat away the non-personnel portion of our budget, leaving less and less available to pay for anything other than people…

Or, we have to reduce the number of people who get those 3.8% increases, which means a loss of services and, ultimately, larger class sizes.

We also need to begin thinking about how we best meet our needs in the area of bricks and mortar — projects like the needed addition at O’Keeffe Middle School and our future space needs in the Country Grove area.
How will this community pay for the $2-4 million annual investment we need to make in technology? That is something we didn’t have to worry about in the chalkboard era, but we have to think about it now.

How do we answer the question raised by the Blue Ribbon Panel, how do we provide for the annual $7-9 million additional expenditure for facility maintenance? We can try to carve it out of the operating budget, but we can’t fool ourselves, that will mean fewer instructional services and larger class sizes. Our other options are to go to referendum to seek an increase in the revenue limit on our operating budget, or continue to borrow for this purpose, which also requires a referendum for each bond issue.

The budget I propose to you tonight reflects our best thinking about how to deal with the fiscal dilemmas we face in the short term. But as we plan for the long haul, the magnitude of the challenge comes into sharper focus. This reality demands that we ask some very basic questions of ourselves.

How much do we expect from our schools? How much do we value small class sizes? How important is it for our schools to keep pace with the stunning rate of technological change in our society?

How much do we expect? Will our investment match our expectations?

How much do we value our class sizes? Enough to keep them small?

How important is it to equip our schools for the 21st Century? Important enough to accept the fact that it is simply and unavoidably more expensive to buy PCs and CD-ROMs than it was to buy chalk and slate boards?

We all have some thinking to do. And we all have some choices to make.

Posted by Janet Morrow

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MMSD video explains School Funding in Wisconsin

This video presents facts and figures from 2004/05 but Educational Funding in Wisconsin remains much the same in 2006/07. Watch it here.
Janet Morrow

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2007 Lobby Day : Raise Your Voice to Make Every Kid Count in the State Budget!

Join with the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and other parents, advocates, teachers, service providers, professionals and concerned citizens to make sure that Wisconsin’s legislators make the needs of kids their top priority in the state budget.

The event takes place on March 14th and starts with a noon registration at the Orpheum Theater on State Street in Madison. Registration and details here.

Robert Godfrey

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