Category Archives: Budget

Walk on the Child’s Side Video Preview

The video is of Randy Kunsch of the Phillips School District testifying at the 2007 hearing on the Pope-Roberts/Breske Resolution.  He was one of the organizers and participants in the first Walk on the Child’s Side in 1999 and will be speaking at the June 16th 10th Anniversary Rally.

Here is the full line up of speakers:

Here is the basic information:

What: 10th anniversary Walk on the Child’s Side

Who: All Wisconsinites who care about their public schools

Where: Walk from the UW-Madison Library Mall to the steps of the State Capitol

When: 11 a.m. on Tuesday , June 16; Rally at Noon , State Capitol

What: 10th anniversary Walk on the Child’s Side

More details here.

See you there.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Read it and Weep (updated)

Pablo Picasso. A Woman in Tears. 1937. Oil on canvas.

Pablo Picasso. A Woman in Tears. 1937. Oil on canvas.

Bobby “Blue” Bland, “Cry, Cry, Cry” (click to listen or download)

Busy days, but I wanted to post the Legislative Fiscal Bureau long-awaited analysis of the Joint Finance Committee’s budget (education section here) It is as bad you might have anticipated.

The Assembly will take up the budget on Wednesday, June 10. [Update:  The vote has been moved to Thursday, the Democrats are meeting in yet another closed Caucus today.]

Local Rep, Kelda Roys has offered an amendment providing for four-year-old kindergarten start up costs.  This would be a huge help for MMSD.   Let your elected officials know you support this amendment and funding investments in education in general.

The link in the previous paragraph has information to contact elected officials and newspapers; another fine way to send a message is to participate in the June 16 Walk on the Child’s Side (the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools has a great updated web page on the event).

On  a related matter, the Wisconsin State Journal recently reported “Study: Stimulus infusions won’t cover loss in state aid for most school districts.”  AMPS has been saying that for a long time (here and here…)

More later.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Behind Closed Doors — Democratic Caucus Budget Work

Gary Hume, Door Painting (for more information, click the image)

Gary Hume, Door Painting (for more information, click the image)

The WisPolitics Budget Blog reports that after an initial open session, the Assembly Democratic caucus shut the door on the public ” to discuss strategy and process for the budget bill.”

Reps. Cory Mason, D-Racine, and Dean Kaufert, R-Neenah have a bill pending to open caucus sessions to the public. It has been referred to committee. Meanwhile the closed door decisions on our state’s future are being made.

Some developments are public. Rep. Bob Ziegelbauer issued a memo raising objections to some items from the Joint Finance Committee budget, including the QEO repeal and the arbitration changes for teachers. Also on the Education front, Rep. Penny Bernard Schaber raised concerns about education funding in the open caucus session.

Some links to related things.

“Ain’t No Sunshine,” on AMPS.

Assembly Democrats ID concerns with Wisconsin budget, Green Bay Press Gazette.

Editorial: Budget dealings are insult to public, Appleton Post Crescent.

Budget process, contract talks not ‘transparent,’ Eau Claire Leader-Telegram

Assembly Democrats’ Fundraiser Appears Out Of Bounds, Wisconsin Democracy Campaign.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Madison Common Council Supports “Walk on the Child’s Side” Rally

Mayor Dave and kids

The Madison Common Council voted this evening to support the “Walk on the Child’s Side” rally slated for June 16th. The resolution read as follows:

WHEREAS, investment in education is essential to the quality of life and future prosperity of Madison and the State of Wisconsin; and
WHEREAS, for 15 years the school funding system of the State of Wisconsin has produced annual shortfalls between costs and allowed revenues, resulting in annual program cuts of between 1% and 2% for most school districts; and WHEREAS, the school funding system of the State of Wisconsin produces inequities in taxation and educational opportunities and does not adequately provide for the distribution of resources based on the diverse circumstances of students and districts; and WHEREAS, the school funding system of the State of Wisconsin’s over reliance on property taxes places school districts in harmful competition with Counties and Municipalities; and WHEREAS, achieving adequate, equitable and sustainable investment in education requires action by state government; and

WHEREAS, on June 7, 1999 the Price County Citizens Who CARE and their allies began a 240 mile “Walk on the Child’s Side” to carry the message of the need for education finance reform to the Wisconsin State Capitol, arriving in Madison on June 17, 1999; and have repeated this walk in subsequent years and have continued working for education finance reform; and WHEREAS, these efforts have been instrumental in bringing public attention to the need for education finance reform; and WHEREAS, On June 16, 2009 at 11:00 the Price County Citizens Who Care will host a 10th Anniversary “Walk on the Child’s Side” Rally and March in Madison, Wisconsin; and WHEREAS, the Mayor and Common Council of the City of Madison Wisconsin recognizes the need to support our local school districts and that fundamental changes in Wisconsin’s school funding system are necessary;

and WHEREAS, the Mayor and Common Council of the City Madison supports efforts to call public attention to this need and seeks to build coalitions to bring about education finance reform. NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Mayor and Common Council of the City of Madison Wisconsin extends support to the “Walk on the Child’s Side” 10th Anniversary Rally and March and encourages the citizens of Madison to support and participate in the “Walk on the Child’s Side” 10th Anniversary Rally and March.

Robert Godfrey

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2,497,139 More Reasons to Join the Walk on the Child’s Side

sign3b

At this evening’s MMSD Board of Education meeting a sheet was distributed estimating that based on the budget passed by the Committee on Joint Finance,  Madison Schools will have cut (or reallocate) an additional $2,497,139 from the 2009-10 budget.  $1,857,450 is estimated to come from the revenue limit cut and $639,689 due to cuts in categorical aid.  These are very preliminary figures.

Many, many more reasons to join the June 16, 2009 Madison  Walk on the Child’s Side 10th Anniversary March and Rally for comprehensive school finance reform (details at the link).  The action begins at 11:00 AM at Library Mall and ends on the steps at the Capitol with a Noon rally.

Of course the best 873,586 reasons are the students enrolled in Wisconsin’s Schools who are depending on us to make the state  live up to the promise of  “A Quality Education for Every Child.”

Spread the word.  Be there.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Wisconsin State Budget = Cuts to Education (special video edition)

As Governor Jim Doyle golfs and collects big checks from donors, school districts all around Wisconsin are working hard to find ways implement the cuts Doyle and the Committee on Joint Finance sent their way, while doing their best to preserve the quality of education.  Here are some video news reports.

Doyle Says Local Funding Problems Could be Worse (from WQOW, Eau Claire)

There was a time when the leaders of our state worked for progress, trying to improve conditions.  Now we are stuck with the message that things are “not as bad as they could have been” and the only thing our leaders seem interested in improving are their golf swings and campaign coffers.

State Cuts Force School Districts To Trim More In Budgets (WISC-TV, Madison)

Both Madison Superintendent Dan Nerad and John Matthews of Madison Teachers Incorporated have very worthwhile things to say about comprehensive school finance reform in this clip.  Watch it.

La Crosse Schools Brace For Deeper Than Expected Budget Cuts (WKBT La Crosse)

As Superintendent Jerry Kember points out, budget woes are nothing new to Wisconsin’s schools.

State’s Budget Plan Leaves Madison School District Unhappy (WSAW, Wausau)

More bad news closer to home for the  Wausau area (no video):

Raises, jobs on line in Merrill Area Public Schools amid budget crisis.

D.C. Everest School Board approves $1.5 million in cuts.

And more from elsewhere in the sate:

State budget plan cuts $1.5M to Green Bay schools: Proposal follows $6M already slashed by district,

Wisconsin passes budget problem on to local governments: Critics say tax system fundamentally flawed.

Even before the latest news from the state, it was impossible to keep up with all of the cuts and layoffs in districts throughout Wisconsin.

This has to end.  Be part of putting a stop to this short-sighted madness, join the June 16 Walk on the Child’s Side 10th Anniversary March and Rally in Madison!

Thomas J. Mertz

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A Different Slice for Governor Jim Doyle

doyle_golfThe Green Bay Press Gazette reports that after cutting state support for education, social services, shared revenues and almost everything else, Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle will be hosting a golf fundraiser today.  While you can can witness his budget cuts for free, it will cost you $1,250 to see Doyle slice on the links.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Voices of Dissent — The Wisconsin State Budget

By Milton Glaser, for more information click the image.

By Milton Glaser, for more information click the image.

A couple more voices of dissent on the Wisconsin State Budget deal (joining those previously noted, Ed Garvey, the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and me).

Dustin Beilke had this to say on the Isthmus/Daily Page:

How unfortunate, then, that so many of the thoughts running through my mind during the 4 hours and 43 minutes I spent plodding along the course had to do with the state budget and the recent announcement that state leaders were agreeing to more state employee layoffs and “furloughs,” and across-the-board spending cuts. These reductions will mean less aid to the poor and the elderly, larger classes and fewer course offerings for public school children, less financial aid for college students whose parents aren’t rich, fewer books in libraries-a lower quality of life for all of us, a dimmer future for the youngest among us, and desperation for those losing their jobs or their last shreds of dignity.

The small handful of commentators who still track state government mostly praised the governor and the Joint Finance Committee for making these “tough choices.”

I disagree. The tough choice would have been the one that most commentators no longer even seem to consider: raising taxes. Among the state’s editorialists, columnists, bloggers and radio commentators Ed Garvey is the only one I found making this obvious suggestion (The Republicans in the Legislature are saying the Democrats are raising taxes even though they aren’t, but I don’t think that counts.)

Other states are increasing taxes during these times when the circumstances so obviously demand it. The New York Times editorial page is encouraging states to do the right thing rather than further denigrate our economy and our future with draconian cuts and layoffs.

The logic behind cutting budgets during an economic downturn like the one we are in is faulty at best. It says that taxpayers cannot afford higher taxes when they are already losing their jobs and having their homes repossessed. But the unemployed do not pay income taxes. And when one level of government shortchanges us, like the state, the burden falls to another level of government or upon our most vulnerable fellow citizens.

But economic logic is not what takes tax increases off the table. It is the political logic that says it is harder to raise campaign money and win re-election if your opponent can say you raised taxes. It is mostly wrong: Incumbents almost always win no matter what they do. But the campaign professionals who generate the political logic don’t specialize in taking risks and are not in the business of serving the public interest.

John Smart’s post on Fighting Bob is about the education cuts in the budget.

Spare our schools

The new state budget realities might lend credence to the notion of cutting funding for our public schools, but as a former school board members I am here to say that is exactly the wrong answer. We must fully support our schools as the surest method to grow the economy out of this economic hole.

Who could possibly think that we can solve our nation’s very serious economic problems with a less-than-well educated work force?

Please, Governor Doyle and legislators, don’t cut school aids, not even by a single dollar. Please allow local revenue limits to increase as much as possible under the law. Please don’t hamstring school boards by repealing the QEO. Please don’t change the rules for contract arbitration. And please do not throw the fiscal responsibility for our schools out to
referendum and onto the backs of local property-taxpayers.

I know, I know – the first comment will be, “So – where will the money come from?” Well, there are ways and there are means.

A recent study showed that a 1 percent increase in the state sales tax would, if dedicated to education, basically solve all of our problems. That would bring us to 6 percent, at the same level as Michigan, and still lower than Illinois and Minnesota. Another suggestion is to reduce the list of tax-exempted products and services, thus bringing in more revenue and making the system more fair at the same time.

There are other revenue plans under consideration in Madison, such as treating capital gains as income – and the combined reporting proposal (an attempt to close the “Las Vegas Loophole” that allows interstate corporations to avoid paying taxes on profits made in Wisconsin by lumping them in with profits made in other states) and, of course, a long overdue increase in the beer tax to $10 per barrel.

If you are not familiar with the Institute for
Wisconsin’s Future
, I encourage you to check them out. The IWF was established in 1994 to research our economic policies and make suggestions and corrections. It is a non-profit, non-partisan organization, and is “rooted in the belief that an educated, engaged citizenry is key to improving individual outcomes.”

Take a look at their suggestions, which are well analyzed and supported by thorough vetting.

Although I failed in my recent bid to be elected to the board of the new Chequamegon School District in Glidden and Park Falls, that doesn’t mean that I am no longer concerned about our schools and our kids.

Everyone who knows me knows that. I am contacting my state legislators and the governor’s office asking them to support our schools. Will you do so, too? The future of our state depends on it.

You can register your own dissent by contacting elected officials, writing letters to the editor (details here) and joining the Walk on the Child’s Side on June 16.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Wisconsin Budget “Fix” — The Saws Come Out

Two Lumbermen with Saw, from the Wisconsin Historical Imgages Collection

Two Lumbermen with Saw, from the Wisconsin Historical Images Collection

Albert  King, “Crosscut Saw” (click to listen or download).

Such large cuts to education in the Wisconsin state budget “fix” just released (budget papers references in the text can be found here), that the axes are temporarily going up on the shelf and the saws have come out .

No time for a full analysis, just listing some of the low lights:

  • Delete sate general school aids increase, $21,945,700.
  • Reduce General School Aids Funding, “$147,001,900 GPR annually in funding for general school aids, which would represent a reduction of approximately 3.1% from base level funding of $4,799,501,900.”
  • Undo the previous use of Stimulus money to fill 2008-9 gap. [see comments]
  • Reduce per pupil Revenue Limit increase from $277 to $200 for 2009-10 and set adjustment at $275 for 2010-11.
  • A “hold harmless” provision for Revenue Limit adjustments if the Consumer Price Index is negative (something good).
  • Delete SAGE increases.
  • Modify the effective date of the QEO repeal to July 1, 2010. “For school
    district collective bargaining agreements that begin on or after July 1,2009, and that are not settled on the effective date of the bill, provide that until July 1, 2010, interest arbitration on unresolved economic issues would only be permitted if consented to by both the school district employer and the collective bargaining representative. In addition adopt Alternative B1 in Paper #330.”
  • 2.5% reductions in categorical aids, see below for the ugly impact

cutsUgly, ugly ugly.  It is all ugly and will get uglier as the implementation of these cuts is debated in districts around the state.

More later, including a fact check to see if total education revenues actually ” increase by approximately 5% on a biennial basis.

Thomas J.  Mertz

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Rumors and Deals — Wisconsin State Budget Update

whispering

Legislative “leaders” met behind closed doors for nine hours yesterday, May 27, 2009.  The Committe on Joint Finance is expected to “finish their work” in a public session starting at Noon today.  The agenda is here.

s_handshake3

Because they are meeting outside of the light of public scrutiny and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau has not posted budget papers on the education portion of the “fix,” we have to rely on rumors and memos from interested parties to learn what is happening.  Fortunately, the team at the WisPolitics Budget Blog has been doing a fine job reporting what little is rumored or known.

The big three education developments are some numbers on the Allowable Revenue Limit increase, a suggested compromise/delay on ending the Qualified Economic Offer from WEAC and the first inklings of a compromise proposal on Milwaukee voucher schools from State Senator Lena Taylor.

On the Revenue Caps, the word is that the new allowable increase for 2009-10 will be between $200 and $210 per pupil, instead of the $277 in the Governor’s initial budget.  By my calculations, that means about a $1.7 million to $1.8 million cut for the Madison Metropolitan School District.  No word on further cuts to categorical aid (yet).

The QEO compromise issue is complicated (I am not sure I understand it), but the general idea is that the proposed elimination of the QEO and the changes in arbitration rules would be delayed and temporary reforms would be put in place.  The proposal from WEC also includes things like allowing four year contracts and combining bargaining units.  You can read the WEAC memo here.  I haven’t seen a reaction yet from the Wisconsin Association of School Boards.

Without more details, it is hard to get a handle on Senator Taylor’s proposal on voucher schools.  here is what WisPolitics is reporting:

In February, Doyle called for a series of changes to the program that would require choice schools to meet many of the standards now imposed on public schools. That includes requiring the same number of instruction hours each year as public schools, administering standardized tests, and requiring all teachers and administrators to have a bachelor’s degree.

“What I’ve offered as a modification is really in many ways more stringent than what the governor has done,” Taylor said.

Taylor said today the compromise package had not been drafted yet.

But some key changes to the governor’s proposal include:

*Removing a requirement that schools must be accredited prior to accepting MPCP students, which Taylor said would be problematic for newly formed schools. Accreditation agencies require schools to be operating before they can be accredited. In its place, the compromise would require schools not yet accredited and wishing to enter the choice program to be screened by the Department of Public Instruction to determine whether they have the financial wherewithal to properly operate and have their educational plan and curriculum approved by a pre-accreditation agency. Furthermore, schools would have to undergo yearly academic audits by the accrediting agency.

*Requiring teacher’s aides to have at least a high school diploma, an area the governor’s proposal does not address.

*Giving schools two years before having to administer the Wisconsin Knowledge and Concepts Examination to students, whereas the governor’s proposal would require that to happen within one year.

See more in Milwaukee Notes.

And as the Joint Finance Committee does their work, school districts await the bad news and prepare for more cuts in educational opportunities.

Menasha just got through cutting $1.27 million and agreeing to use over $200,000 from their Fund Balance to avoid further cuts (including maintaining SAGE).  What comes out of the JFC, the Legislature and the Governor’s office will likely lead them to reexamine these decisions look for additional cuts.

The Waupun Area School District has already cut $1.1 million from their 2009-10 budget and anticipate the latest hit from the state will require laying off 12-15 staff members, larger class sizes and fewer opportunities.

Whatever the Governor and his people tell you, the cuts are real.

Stay tuned.

Thomas J. mertz

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