Category Archives: “education finance”

A Slice of Two-Thirds

Credit: TeckPoh

Credit: TeckPoh

Following several hours of impassioned testimony from administrators, parents, and staff from school districts throughout the state, both large and small, at this week’s School Finance Network Assembly Hearing, it ended, unfortunately, on what could be charitably characterized as a flat note. Despite the hard work of disparate leaders of education groups meeting constantly for the past couple of years to come up with a thoroughly conceptualized school finance reform plan to present to the legislature, a committee composed of organizations in the School Finance Network who have often been traditionally at odds with each other in the past (for example WEAC and WASB ), came to the hearing armed with numbers vetted by both economists at the UW-Madison and the state Legislative Fiscal Bureau, including a number of suggestions for how to pay for this reform. However, the Committee on Education made it clear they were not going to take any action on this plan for the upcoming budget legislation hearings for the 2009-2011 budget. And most discouragingly there was, as far as I’m aware, no newspaper coverage of this event. I saw only one Madison tv crew present. They covered some of the personal testimony at the beginning but were not around to hear the actual presentation of the plan itself, which came late in the proceedings, too late to make it into the evening broadcast.

There are several political issues at play here, and with the funding reform process seemingly ended as soon as it was given its first oxygen to breathe, I think we may be headed towards even more dangerous waters. We will try and cover what rocky shores we may be encountering in future posts (such as the Governor’s push to repeal the QEO without other fundamental reforms). I want to draw your attention to one of them that, frankly, I missed in some of our earlier discussion on AMPS here about the use of federal stimulus money for school budgeting. In the Summary of Governor’s Budget Recommendations, Thomas Mertz pointed out his confusion with the school district’s use of their increase in their federal Title I and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) funding to reduce their levies and the potential bad effects this may have on district’s budgets in subsequent years. I, along with Mr. Mertz, remain quite confused about the Governor’s and the Legislative Fiscal Bureau’s thinking on the added stimulus money to IDEA and Title I as a way to keep within the Fed guidlines of “supplement not supplant.” It would appear that the Governor is planning to scale back his professed desire for the state to provide 2/3’s funding for education and instead reduce it to a level between 62.0% and 63.2% in 2010-11 and the shortfall made up with increased short-term Fed dollars. As an editorial in the New York Times noted the other day:

The education portion of the federal stimulus package gives a $13 billion boost to Title I, the federal program that is meant to provide extra help to disadvantaged schoolchildren. And the Department of Education has issued new guidelines, requiring states to give a clearer accounting of how education dollars are spent. But the federal money won’t get to the students for whom it is intended unless the department bird dogs this issue.

As envisioned by Congress, Title I is supposed to serve as an additional layer of financing for high-poverty schools that already are provided with budgets comparable to other schools in the same system. In reality, states and localities have often shortchanged schools that served the poor and used federal money to make up the difference in their basic budgets.

They further added:

The states and localities will resist the reporting requirement, which could easily unmask unethical financing gaps and even evasions of federal education law. But Arne Duncan, the education secretary, needs to hold them to the rules. The new reporting requirement is absolutely essential to school reform in general and fairness for impoverished children in particular.

But in yesterday’s State Journal report showing that MMSD would be receiving $11.7 million over two years from the stimulus bill, the Governor was quoted as warning school districts against “creating “funding cliffs”: using the short-term dollars to start new programs that would have to be sustained later by other funding.” But isn’t that what he is doing in his budget, promising something and then pretending he’s actually paying for it with two funds that are meant to supplement and not supplant state funding?

The Governor is further quoted, “This money can really protect our property taxpayers, and it also can add real quality to our schools if used correctly,” Doyle said.

Indeed. We’ll wait to see what the Obama administration has to say about this old street hustle 3-cups-and-a-ball routine.

Robert Godfrey

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Accountability, AMPS, Best Practices, Budget, Equity, finance, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, National News, School Finance

School Finance Network Assembly Hearing, Tuesday April 21, Be There!

sfn_logo_option_b

The hearing is on the School Finance Network plan, but it is more generally an important opportunity to show support for comprehensive school finance reform.  The lawmakers need to know we care.  Be there if you can!

Details here and below.  The Basics: Tuesday April 21 at 1:00 PM at the Wisconsin State Capitol in room 413 north.

School Finance Network Reform Plan Subject of April 21st Hearing at the Capitol

Statewide coalition of more than 100,000 members announces support for changes to public school funding

Members of the Assembly Education Committee have scheduled a hearing for April 21st at 1 p.m., to consider the School Finance Network’s funding reform plan.

The meeting will be held at the Wisconsin State Capitol in room 413 north, and is open to the public. In addition to members of the SFN coalition, parents, students, educators, and taxpayers from around the state will speak.

The School Finance Network is a statewide coalition of educational, religious, and community-oriented organizations, committed to strengthening the funding system for our public schools.

The School Finance Network plan details how public school districts statewide would benefit through changes that help children with special needs, disabilities and from low income families. It also includes updates to the funding formula for rural districts and those with declining enrollment. The plan also helps maintain classes that help young people to learn skills that can benefit their communities.

The School Finance Network is made up of the following groups: AFT–Wisconsin, the Fair Aid Coalition, the School Administrators Alliance, the South-eastern Wisconsin Schools Alliance, the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools, the Wisconsin Association of School Boards, the Wisconsin Association of School District Administrators, the Wisconsin Education Association Council, and the Wisconsin PTA

What: Assembly Education Committee hearing on the School Finance Network plan.

When: April 21st at 1 p.m.

Where: Wisconsin State Capitol, Room 413 North.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

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

Another District Heading for Dissolution? Give Paris One More Chance

parispantherlogomelt1

Jonathan Richman, “Give Paris One More Chance” (click to listen or download).

Last year it was Wausaukee and Milwaukee, before that Florence; now the Paris District is talking and voting on dissolution (and here).

You can’t say this is a surprise.  The whole way Wisconsin funds education has been accurately called a “going out of business” plan (video here); Prior to the overwhelming defeat of a referendum on April 7, Administrator Roger Gahart warned that a no vote could lead to dissolving the district.

Here is how the situation was explained.

A combination of factors have led Paris into financial difficulty.

The district is considered property-rich under state funding formulas, and has had declines in student enrollment, both factors leading to a steady reduction in state aid. At the same time, state law limits the amount of money districts can collect under the revenue cap, and its expenses have grown faster than revenues.

Paris has cut its budget over the past year, eliminating some staff positions and reducing costs. But the district, with just one classroom per grade level, has little room left to cut…

The dissolution vote is only the first step of  a long process that most often does not end in a dissolution.

Paris is a very small K-8 district, serving less than 200 students.  A case can be made that consolidating with another district would be  best.  Certainly economics should play a role in this decision, yet when you look closely  it is clear that dissolution/consolidation won’t fix many of the problems.

There will be some economies of scale, but the recent cuts in Paris indicate that this potential is limited.

• Reductions in staff for 2008-2009 school year saved $100,240.
• Reductions in staff for 2009-2010 school year projected to be $60,000 to $70,000.
• Total current expenses reduced $121,966 from Fall Budget report.
• 26.5% reduction in supply expenses from 2007-2008 school year to 2008-2009.
• 52% reduction in supply expenses from
2008-2009 school year to 2009-2010.
• Improved energy conservation and building maintenance practices.
• Taking advantage of used, refurbished, and donated materials and equipment.

The district mentioned as possible new homes for the Paris students are Kenosha Unified, Bristol, Union Grove or Brighton.  They all have there problems.

Kenosha is dealing with the aftermath of an ill-advised investment strategy (inspired by the need to do something to try to deal with the broken state finance system), the budget pressures were a major issue in the recent School Board elections, they are phasing out the Music Department and not too long ago faced protests against “excessive budget cuts.”

I can’t find anything on the Bristol or Brighton budgets.  Not much on Union Grove either, except an incumbent Board Member seeking re-eletion saying “school funding” is “the most important issue facing the board.”

If dissolution/consolidation is only a partial and temporary fix, the School Finance Network (SFN) has a proposal that will help all districts in Wisconsin achieve sustainable funding for excellent education.  There will be a hearing on the SFN plan on Tuesday April 21 at 1:00 PM at the Wisconsin State Capitol in room 413 north (more details here).  It is important that there be a good crowd supporting comprehensive reform.  Be there!

Meanwhile, contact your elected officials, the media and get involved (see here for “how to’).

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

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

Fragrant Delusions

reality-check

In another episode of feigned outrage, the new adjunct to a scorned Republican Party searching for new identity – leaderless and jumbled up with 30 years of rhetoric that, surprisingly, in just a wink of an eye, seems immensely trite, dated even – tone deaf to the body politic; behold a specimen of Wisconsin politics that can easily serve as specimen A of this “did we really talk and think like that before” mentality. We present to you – Steve Nass.

In short, the Cap Times editorial, responding in part to this, pretty much says it all. It can only be redundant to pile on with citations of this piece. Suffice to say, this crazed, destroy it all juju, is merely a taste of the Trojan Horse “Sturm und Drang” that would have awaited us if the Rose Fernandez candidacy had been successful. To cite more positive rhetoric of Wisconsin’s history, Forward!

Robert Godfrey

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Accountability, AMPS, Best Practices, Gimme Some Truth, School Finance, We Are Not Alone

MMSD (Preliminary) Budget Released

mmsd-budget

All the information is here; the Wisconsin State Journal has a story also.

More to follow in the coming weeks.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News

FDR 1938 Speech to the NEA

Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s June 1938 speech to the National Education Association (hat tip, Crooks and Liars).

Full text here; some excerpts:

We have believed wholeheartedly in investing the money of all the people on the education of the people. That conviction, backed up by taxes and dollars, is no accident, for it is the logical application of our faith in democracy.

 

Here is where the whole problem of education ties in definitely with natural resources and the economic picture of the individual community or state. We all know that the best schools are, in most cases, located in those communities which can afford to spend the most money on them—the most money for adequate teachers’ salaries, for modern buildings and for modern equipment of all kinds. We know that the weakest educational link in the system lies in those communities which have the lowest taxable values, therefore, the smallest per capita tax receipts and, therefore, the lowest teachers’ salaries and most inadequate buildings and equipment. We do not blame these latter communities. They want better educational facilities, but simply have not enough money to pay the cost.

There is probably a wider divergence today in the standard of education between the richest communities and the poorest communities than there was one hundred years ago; and it is, therefore, our immediate task to seek to close that gap—not in any way by decreasing the facilities of the richer communities but by extending aid to those less fortunate. We all know that if we do not close this gap it will continue to widen, for the best brains in the poor communities will either have no chance to develop or will migrate to those places where their ability will stand a better chance.

Make them listen to this in Madison and in Washington.

Thomas J. Mertz

 

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Accountability, Best Practices, Blast from the Past, Budget, education, Equity, finance, Gimme Some Truth, National News, School Finance, Take Action

April 7, 2009 Referenda Results

From Modern Mechanix (click image for more)

From Modern Mechanix (click image for more)

The results are in.  Good news with Tony Evers, Shirley Abrahamson and Arlene Siveira.  Very mixed results on the school referend in Wisconsin.  Not as bad as February, but many children’s educations will suffer as a result of the losses.

Information on the measures can be found in this previous post and the full report from DPI is here.

First the Non Recurring Operating Referenda where 10 passed and 14 failed.

DISTRICT

Referenda Type

Yes Votes

No Votes

RESULTS

Birchwood (0441)

NR – 2009 – 2011

360

386

Failed

Horicon (2576)

NR – 2009

505

822

Failed

Kiel Area (2828)

NR – 2009 – 2016

887

928

Failed

Loyal (3206)

NR – 2009 – 2012

439

514

Failed

Manawa (3276)

NR – 2009 – 2014

590

937

Failed

Oakfield (4025)

NR – 2010 – 2014

308

344

Failed

Oshkosh Area (4179)

NR – 2009 – 2014

6,872

6,930

Failed

Reedsburg (4753)

NR – 2009 – 2012

999

2,240

Failed

Ripon (4872)

NR – 2009 – 2012

854

1,112

Failed

Wheatland J1 (6412)

NR – 2009 – 2013

363

417

Failed

Albany (0063)

NR – 2009 – 2013

459

333

Passed

Benton (0427)

NR – 2009 – 2012

407

291

Passed

Bowler (0623)

NR – 2009 – 2012

223

216

Passed

Elcho (1582)

NR – 2009 – 2012

800

632

Passed

Herman #22 (2523)

NR – 2009 – 2014

142

137

Passed

Maple Dale-Indian Hill (1897)

NR – 2009 – 2019

809

632

Passed

Mineral Point (3633)

NR – 2009 – 2011

896

592

Passed

Northland Pines (1526)

NR – 2009 – 2012

1,963

1,767

Passed

Oshkosh Area (4179)

NR – 2009 – 2014

7,212

6,624

Passed

Phelps (4330)

NR – 2009 – 2012

378

144

Passed

Phelps (4330)

NR – 2009 – 2012

360

161

Passed

Ripon (4872)

NR – 2009 – 2015

1,077

898

Passed

Washington (6069)

NR – 2009

242

236

Passed

Wisconsin Heights (0469)

NR – 2009 – 2011

1,225

598

Passed

Lots of close votes (6 on Washington Island referendum!) and unfortunately, unless there is comprehensive reform (see below), even the districts where the referenda passed will soon be asking again or heading off the cliff.  Many of the ones that failed will return to the voters, sooner rather than later.

The results for Recurring Operating Referenda were not as good.  7 failed and only 2 passed.

DISTRICT

Referenda Type

Yes Votes

No Votes

RESULTS

Medford Area (3409)

RR – 2010

1,220

2,428

Failed

Merrill Area (3500)

RR – 2009

1,836

3,153

Failed

Middleton-Cross Plains (3549)

RR – 2009

4,963

5,726

Failed

Paris J1 (4235)

RR – 2009

165

512

Failed

Reedsburg (4753)

RR – 2009

1,349

1,907

Failed

Riverdale (3850)

RR – 2009

559

883

Failed

Siren (5376)

RR – 2009

234

418

Failed

North Lakeland (0616)

RR – 2009

839

732

Passed

Reedsville (4760)

RR – 2009

863

554

Passed

The votes don’t look to have been as close. Recurring referenda make much more sense in terms of planning, but for some reason the anti-forces have been very successful demagoguing the concept.

Last the Issue Debt Referenda (building, remodling, upgrading HVAC…).

DISTRICT

Referenda Type

Yes Votes

No Votes

RESULTS

Medford Area (3409)

Issue Debt

1,191

2,505

Failed

Middleton-Cross Plains (3549)

Issue Debt

4,766

5,677

Failed

Middleton-Cross Plains (3549)

Issue Debt

5,008

5,425

Failed

Oshkosh Area (4179)

Issue Debt

3,761

10,124

Failed

West Bend (6307)

Issue Debt

5,632

6,317

Failed

Albany (0063)

Issue Debt

539

257

Passed

Cudahy (1253)

Issue Debt

1,085

1,000

Passed

Elk Mound Area (1645)

Issue Debt

648

413

Passed

Maple Dale-Indian Hill (1897)

Issue Debt

972

465

Passed

Reedsville (4760)

Issue Debt

795

624

Passed

Ripon (4872)

Issue Debt

1,372

616

Passed

West Bend (6307)

Issue Debt

5,971

5,897

Passed

5 yes and 7 no, with mixed results in West Bend.

More votes in Salem and Cuba City later this month and elsewhere — especially where referenda failed —  the axe will continue to fall and AMPS will cover as many of the cuts as we can.

Now the” take action” boilerplate (literally cut-and-paste this time).

This growing reliance on regular referenda is perhaps the clearest evidence that the way our state funds education is broken.  Too much time and energy is being misdirected at securing basic funding instead of educating, too many communities are being split over these votes instead of united to give their children the opportunities to create a better future.

It is well past time to fix it.

Get involved in the effort by attending the April 21, 2009 Assembly Education Committee hearing on the School Finance Network proposal (info here), and joining the School Finance Network and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (it is just fine to do all of the above, I have or will).

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, Elections, finance, Local News, Referenda, referendum, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized, We Are Not Alone

44 School Referenda On April 7!

From the Cleveland Municipal School District Visions of Democracy project, click on the image for more.

From the Cleveland Municipal School District Visions of Democracy project, click on the image for more.

Today,  April 7, 2009 voters in 30 Wisconsin school districts will decide 44 referenda questions.  April 21 brings a 31st in Cuba City.  On April 28 a 32st district, Salem, will vote on a referendum for the fourth time in less than a year.

Salem is an extreme case, but at least 10 of the districts seeking operating funds have had failed operating referenda in the last two years and five seeking operating funds are districts facing the “off the cliff” loss of funds scenario that hits when a non-recurring referendum runs out.

There are a total of 32 operating referenda, 9 recurring and 23 non recurring (including 3 of the 5 districts on the edge of the cliff because previous non-recurring referenda are expiring); the remaining 12 votes are to issue debt for building, maintenance, refurbishing and upgrading projects. Before listing and linking,  some context and a call to action.

[Note:  Wisconsin Heights was missed in the original post.  It has been added below, but the rest has not been updated.]

Not counting the April 2009 votes, since April 1, 2007 there have been 252 referenda in Wisconsin; since April 1, 2005 there have been 481.

This growing reliance on regular referenda is perhaps the clearest evidence that the way our state funds education is broken.  Too much time and energy is being misdirected at securing basic funding instead of educating, too many communities are being split over these votes instead of united to give their children the opportunities to create a better future.

It is well past time to fix it.

Get involved in the effort by attending the April 21, 2009 Assembly Education Committee hearing on the School Finance Network proposal (info on both here), and joining the School Finance Network and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (it is just fine to do all of the above, I have or will).

The official details of all the referenda are here; Below are links to more information on the ballot measures (search AMPS for more on many)

Operating, Non-Recurring:

Wisconsin Heights:  Newsletter.

Wheatland J1: District Site; District Press Release, News Story “Wheatland Center to vote on revenue cap referendum.”

Washington Island District Referendum Info.

Ripon District Referendum Page; PolicyOptions.org, Brief (good stuff)

Phelps District Referendum Page.

Oshkosh Area District Referendum Page; News Stories, “Details emerge on Oshkosh school district’s three question referendum in April,” “Teachers organization underwriting majority of referendum ‘Yes’ vote push.”

Oakfield District Site; “What makes Oakfield special?’

Northland Pines Referendum Page.

North Lakeland District Site; News Stories, “North Lakeland voters to consider referendum Tuesday,” “Vought, committee make case for proposed new levy referendum.”

Mineral Point District Referendum Page.

Middleton-Cross Plains District “Community Conversation;” Referendum Page; Ellen Lindgren: “Middleton’s Kromrey School should be replaced.”

Maple Dale-Indian HillDistrict Site; News Story, “Maple Dale-Indian Hill School Board votes for referendum.”

Manawa District Referendum Page; Editorial: “Manawa referendum helps protect schools.”

Loyal District Site; News Story, “School District of Loyal Asks Taxpayers to Reach Into Pockets.”

Kiel Area District Referendum Page; Letters to the Editor.

Horicon District Site; News Story, “Horicon to pursue school referendum.”

Herman District Referendum Page.

Elcho District Referendum Page, News Stories, “Elcho school district leaders push for referendum” (with video), “Elcho heads to referendum.”

Bowler District Site; News Story, “Bowler school district leaders asking taxpayers for referendum.”

Birchwood District Site.

Benton District Site; Fact Sheet; PowerPoint.

Albany District Referendum Page; News Story: “Albany voters face two school referendums.

Operating, Recurring:

Siren:  District Site; News Story “Siren looks at school referendum.”

Riverdale District Referendum Page

Reedsville District Referendum Page; News Stories, “Reedsville public schools facing financial crisis,” “Reedsville schools’ future up to voters.”

Reedsburg District Referendum Page; News Story, “District will leave no stone unturned.”

Paris J1: District Fact Sheet; News Story: “Will Paris deal with budget shortfall or dissolve the district?

Merrill Area District Referendum Page; News Stories, “Leaders like Merrill referendum’s chances,” “Merrill will try again for school aid.”

Medford AreaDistrict Site; Building the Medford Community.

Issue Debt

West Bend District Referendum Page.

Ripon District Referendum Page; PolicyOptions.org, Brief (good stuff).

Oshkosh Area District Referendum Page; News Stories, “Details emerge on Oshkosh school district’s three question referendum in April,” “Teachers organization underwriting majority of referendum ‘Yes’ vote push.”

Middleton-Cross Plains District “Community Conversation;” Referendum Page; Ellen Lindgren: “Middleton’s Kromrey School should be replaced.”

Medford AreaDistrict Site; Building the Medford Community.

Maple Dale-Indian HillDistrict Site; News Story, “Maple Dale-Indian Hill School Board votes for referendum.”

Elk Mound Area District Referendum Page, News Video; Blog post “Referendums are a tough sell,” News Story,” Elk Mound Board OKs spending referendum.”

Cudahy District Referendum Page, News Story.,” Roof work tops Cudahy referendum spending list.”

Turnout will be low in most places.  So many futures riding on so few votes.

I wish them all the best.

Vote Yes for Schools!

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, Elections, Local News, Referenda, referendum, School Finance, Uncategorized, We Are Not Alone

Joint Finance Budget Hearings

Andy Warhol, "Dollar Signs"

Andy Warhol, "Dollar Signs"

The Parliaments, “(I Just Wanna) Testify” (click to listen or download)

The public testimony phase of the Joint Committee On Finance‘s (JFC) budget process has begun.  There were official hearings last week in Sparta, West Allis and Eau Claire, as well as a listening session in Ashland. This week the committee will be in Racine on Monday, March 30;  Appleton, Wednesday April 1; and Cambridge on Friday, April 3 (click here for details).

The way it works is, first the Governor proposes a budget, then the JFC hears from agency heads and the public and proposes changes (or not), each house of the legislature takes up the options and than it is a three-way back-and forth, till there is budget that both houses agree on and the Governor signs (the Governor gets one final swipe with his now-limited partial veto).  Much of this is explained in this 2007 memo.

These hearings are the only official public opportunity for citizens to have a say in Wisconsin’s  taxing, spending and investment priorities over the next two years.

It is disappointing that the media coverage has been so minimal (see below for some of what has appeared).

Some of this is due to the reality that these hearings are largely a ritualistic dance.  Advocates make their case, legislators smile and nod and look for openings to make their points and then behind closed caucus and office doors the real work is done (Reps. Cory Mason, D-Racine, and Dean Kaufert, R-Neenah have proposed bringing party caucuses under the open meetings laws).  I still think that the hearings are important, if only to keep the voice of the public before the powerful.  The hundreds who testified last week also think it is important.

For advocates of comprehensive school finance reform, the ritual dance requires some awkward steps.  It isn’t easy to simultaneously speak to pressing need a big fix of the broken system and address what is likely to be helpful or harmful in the immediate budget process.

Most  advocates also have an interest in budget matters not directly related to comprehensive school funding reform.   So teachers such as Kelly McMahon and Abby Ryan make strong cases for the Student Achievement Guarantee  in Education (SAGE) program within the context of the general benefits of investing in education but with no direct appeal for comprehensive reform.

John Smart, a Board Member in Park Falls testifying in Ashland didn’t use any fancy terpsichorean moves, he simply reminded the committee members of the failures of our current system and the possibilities offered by the School Finance Network:

My name is John Smart – I am a member of the Park Falls School Board, the Policies & Resolutions Committee of the Wisconsin Association of School Boards [WASB], and the board of the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools [WAES].

The Park Falls and Glidden School Districts have voted to consolidate, and the new Chequamegon School District will officially come into existence on July 1st of this year. I am running for the new board as well in the April 7th election, but I don’t know how I will fare! As elected officials yourselves, you will understand that…

We hope to realize some economies of scale by consolidating, but the principle reason for doing so is to provide our students with more opportunities. We will appreciate anything that the legislature can do to assist us in this challenge. You will be seeing many more school district consolidations in the near future, so be prepared.

You are certainly aware that the costs of running an effective school district continue to rise: staff – healthcare – technology – building maintenance – and so much more. You are also aware that referenda have been increasingly unsuccessful in raising the necessary funds. Ours was. Our property-taxpayers are rebelling. The existing school funding formula does not work anymore – if it ever did – and reform is desperately needed.

The WASB and the WAES are both members of the School Finance Network, along with representatives of almost all of the stakeholders in education in Wisconsin, including the PTA. The SFN has proposed a new funding formula, which will be analyzed at a hearing of the Assembly Education Committee on April 21st, and I intend to be there as well.

I urge you to look closely at school funding. We really must do something to resolve this situation before we do damage to one of the best education establishments in the nation. Thank you for your consideration.

WEAC President Mary Bell moved with grace between the immediate and the big picture while also advocating for consideration of the School Finance Network‘s proposals.  Here are excerpts from her testimony in Sparta:

The budget proposal introduced by Gov. Jim Doyle recognizes that we must all make sacrifices in light of Wisconsin’s challenging economic conditions, but that there is no greater promise than the one we make to educate our children for the future. Investing in them reaps dividends for generations to come, and we cannot turn our backs on who we are and what we value – our children’s education. Wisconsin has great schools because the people of our state have been committed to building great schools for generations – even in times of hardship. We urge the legislature to uphold our great tradition by passing the Governor’s budget proposal with funding for schools intact.

I’d like to now speak to some of the specific features of the Governor’s budget proposal that will affect public schools and colleges in Wisconsin….

We support these funding improvements, but urge the legislature not to assume they will solve the serious funding issues of Wisconsin’s public schools. Layoffs and program cuts will still be part of the spring and summer news reports, though certainly not as deep as without this important investment. A thoughtful and comprehensive look at school funding is needed, if not with this budget, then in this legislative session. The School Finance Network proposal is, we believe, worthy of your attention as we, the citizens of Wisconsin engage in that conversation…

Many others testified on education issues, but the news reports are pretty skimpy, so it is hard to tell how they managed the dance.

WAYY reports that in West Eau Claire:

Eau Claire School Superintendent, Dr. Ron Heilmann, was one of several area administrators who spoke on the difficulties facing school districts. Heilmann says revenue limits over the past 16 years are threatening public schools across the state. Eau Claire is one of several districts considering lay-offs for teachers and other staff to cut expenses (see this on AMPS for more on cuts in Eau Claire and elsewhere).

The story on WEAU also mentions Dr. Heilmann’s testimony.

The Leader-Telegram article includes Heilmann and adds some words about others educators:

Many educators addressed the committee, saying limiting revenues as costs continue to grow has created a budgetary imbalance that threatens the quality of services schools can provide. From growing class sizes to fewer programs, schools can’t continue under the current funding system without gutting educational programs, school officials said.

“We’re not making it here, folks,” Eau Claire school board member Brent Wogahn told panel members, who were spread across the full width of the Gantner Concert Hall stage.

After years of school districts trimming budgets, Heilmann said, “The fat is gone … and (budget cuts) are impacting our students in ways that are unacceptable.”

The testimony of  Chippewa Falls School District Business Manager Chad Trowbridge, also in Eau Claire, was covered by Chppewa.com:

Trowbridge said the district had made $2.3 million in cuts since 2000, and was still facing a deficit in 2010-2011.

“We continue to do more with less and we are subjected to the same kind of inflationary pressures as everyone else,” he said.

Trowbridge warned that any state cuts from the two-thirds finding level would result in increased property taxes. He also spoke in opposition to repeal of the Qualified Economic Offer policy that limits teacher salary and benefit increases.

Finally, here is a video on the Sparta hearing  from Channel 3000, Madison.  Not much on school funding, but a great time-lapse sequence that gives the feel of the ritual dance.

As always the WisPolitics Budget Blog is a good source for updates on the budget process, including the JFC hearings (although this time around, the coverage seems a bit thin thus far).

Don’t forget that you too can learn how to do the citizen/lobbyist for school finance reform dance at the MMSD Legislative Advocacy Forum on Wednesday, April 1 at Wright Middle School.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News, Referenda, referendum, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized, We Are Not Alone

MMSD State Budget Advocacy Forum, April 1

Click on image for pdf flier.

Click on image for pdf flier to print and post.

Here are the details in plain text:

State Budget Advocacy Forum

Wednesday, April 1st, 6:00 pm

Wright Middle School LMC
1717 Fish Hatchery Road

Faced with an unprecedented $5.7 billion deficit, the state budget cuts programs all across state government. Come to the session to:

  • Learn how the state budget affects Madison Schools
  • Find out how to advocate for school resources at the Capitol
  • Learn about future prospects for comprehensive school funding reform
  • This brief session will provide you with the tools to advocate for our schools and children.

For more information about the K-12 provisions in the state budget, click here.

Thomas J. Mertz

Leave a comment

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