Category Archives: Elections

2008 Presidential Candidates and Positions on Education

Folks,

As the presidential campaigns are moving forward, I thought it might be good to provide a summary of candidate positions on public education.

There is a very wide field of views, from those arguing for universal pre-school opportunities (Edwards) to giving parents more control of schools (Giuliani). No endorsement here… just hoping you can review the field of candidate positions on education.

You might say that it is too early to worry about this. But, consider that the candidate’s views, while they tend to change a bit during the campaign, are most heavily formulated and transparent now. Once the primaries are over, we often see less details and more vague phrases like “I support education”.

I’ve tried to list as many of the candidates as I could. Most websites have video.

– Jerry Eykholt

Washington Post – Field of Presidential Candidates for 2008 Election:
http://projects.washingtonpost.com/2008-presidential-candidates/

On the Issues.Org: summary of candidate’s positions on education:
http://www.ontheissues.org/Education.htm

A set of candidates at the NEA Meeting in July (YouTube videos):
http://www.nea.org/annualmeeting/raaction/07candidates.html

Former Sen. Edwards:
http://johnedwards.com/media/video/des-moines-ia-education-speech

Sen. Obama:
http://obama.senate.gov/speech/051025-teaching_our_ki/

Sen. Clinton:
http://www.nea.org/annualmeeting/raaction/07clintonspeech.html

Gov. Richardson:
http://www.richardsonforpresident.com/issues/education

Gov. Romney:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/08/16/politics/p171851D00.DTL

Former Mayor Giuliani: ( I had trouble finding other video)
http://blip.tv/file/355235/
http://workingcalifornians.com/candidate_position/rudy_giuliani_on_education

Gov. Romney
http://www.mittromney.com/Issue-Watch/Education

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State Budget News Roundup

The biggest news is the appointment of the Budget Conference Committee. Here are the members’ home pages:

Senate

Judy Robson (D)
Russell Decker (D)
Robert Jauch (D)
Scott Fitzgerald (R)

Assembly

Michael Huebsch (R)
Kitty Rhoades (R)
Jeff Fitzgerald (R)
James Kreuser (D)

Not really news, but I think it is timely to give a plug for the Take Back the Assembly project.

In Effect is optimistic (more here and some good links in both):

Sure, a handful of Republicans in the Assembly will hold out for a budget like this one, but enough will ultimately side with a budget that looks far more like what came out of the JFC last month.

Adam Wise (Wisconsin Rapids Tribune) correctly locates education issues at the center of the budget conflicts.

WCLO (Janesville) reports that “Assembly budget would hurt many school districts.”

The Herald Times (Manitowoc) editorializes “Major policy issues don’t belong in budgeting process.”

The Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee) saw through the GOP rhetoric on school funding and correctly reported “Assembly aims to limit taxes, as well as school funds.”

The Beloit daily News continues this theme with the story: “Proposed budget hurts schools.”

The Appleton Post Crescent reports on the partisanship of the process but also includes a reminder that the state GOP is not all on board with the extremism of the Assembly budget.

Appleton Mayor Tim Hanna sided with the governor, literally, at a news conference at an Appleton fire station.

“I don’t necessarily agree with everything the governor has to say, but I do agree that that what’s in the Republican Assembly package would be bad for Appleton and it would be bad for the state,” said Hanna, a longtime Republican. “However, I believe the Senate Democratic package is just as extreme on the other end.”

More reports and press releases from the Governor’s swing around the state:

Milwaukee, Madison, Superior, La Crosse, Wausau, and Kenosha.

As always, the WisPolitics Budget Blog has more.

Don’t forget to let your Reps and Senators know how you feel.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Happy Independence Day

“There is but one method of rendering a republican form of government durable, and that is by disseminating the seeds of virtue and knowledge through every part of the state by means of proper places and modes of education and this can be done effectively only by the aid of the legislature.”

Benjamin Rush, Signer of the Declaration of Independence

“This is My Country,” Curtis Mayfield & the Impressions (listen)
“Back in the USA,” Chuck Berry (listen)

Thomas J. Mertz

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Quote of the Day

“Stop this silliness about decreasing taxes, and let’s talk about how to increase the human potential of those students who are slipping through the educational cracks and becoming nothing more than a statistic.”

Salli Martyniak, Waunakee
Letter to the editor (read the full letter)
Capital Times, July 2, 2007

Thomas J. Mertz

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Democratic Presidential Candidates on Education

The first two questions in last night’s presidential debate were on education. Because of the one minute answer format there aren’t many devilish details, but I still think it is worth reading what they had to say. The education questions and answers are excerpted here, a full transcript has been posted by the New York Times.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Why Teacher’s Quit

“The combination of the increased needs of children and the increased testing and paperwork pressures of No Child Left Behind is a lethal one for many teachers. What started as exciting and meaningful work becomes overwhelmingly stressful and unfulfilling.

Inadequate funding, across all school districts in California, still places severe limitations on reducing class size and providing students with emotional support services. Additionally, many districts are more concerned with the stigma of low test scores than they are with providing adequate support for teachers. “

Full story By Mark Phillips in the Marin Independent Journal (hat tip to Jim Horn at Schools Matter).

Thomas J. Mertz

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BOE Contract Vote

Three Board of Education members voted against the MTI contract on Monday, June 18, 2007. My initial reaction was that it was a ‘free” vote, a vote without consequences. When elected officials know that there are sufficient votes to pass or defeat a measure they can use their votes to make a statement without taking responsibility for what would happen were they to prevail. This is what happened on Monday, those who voted against the contract knew that it would pass and that they would not be held responsible for the serious consequences that would ensue had they been in the majority. Upon reflection, I realized that in fact the vote has the consequences of exacerbating divisions among our teachers that are hard to justify based on their stated rationales for opposing the contract.

What would have happened if the minority had been the majority, had the contract been voted down after the union had already ratified it? Negotiations would have continued in some form, perhaps simply the preparation of final offers to submit to arbitration. At the Board meeting Superintendent stated that under those circumstances he would have requested the appointment of a new negotiating team. That certainly would have lengthened the process and meant the allocation of additional resources. Superintendent Rainwater and all of the Board members who spoke to the matter were in agreement that the contract was within the guidelines that the Board had given the negotiating team. This raises the possibility that voting down would have been considered a violation of the obligation to bargain in good faith. If that had happened, the union would have gained a big advantage in the continued negotiations. From the district point of view, none of these are good things.

Those who voted against the contract expressed their dissatisfaction with the fact that continuing the basic healthcare framework (WPS and GHC, with most of the cost differences paid by the district) limited the district’s ability to increase salaries. Further negotiations would not have changed this. The impasse agreement in place indicates that the negotiations had passed the deadline where they were required to submit the issues to binding arbitration. Anecdotally, arbitration is rarely desirable for school districts; the terms of the impasse agreement precluded “any modifications of Section VII-B of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, i.e Group Health Insurance.”

I doubt the minority voters would have voted against the contract if there had been any possibility that it would have been rejected; looking at where that would have left the district I am glad there was no possibility.

Those who voted against the contract had previously spoken against the impasse agreement, contending that the district had surrendered a “huge bargaining chip” in the battle to reduce health care costs. It has been explained before that very little was surrendered and that the district received concessions from MTI in return, but this message does not seem to have gotten through. In exchange for an agreement by MTI not to authorize job actions (including “work to contract, which would kill extracurriculars) the district agreed not to impose a Qualified Economic Offer and to remove health insurance and some other issues from potential arbitration (the impasse agreement also set a calendar and included some other conditions, but I don’t know whose interests these favored, perhaps both). A Qualified Economic Offer must maintain, “fringe benefits in effect 90 days before bargaining commenced” and “district percentage fringe contributions then in effect.” In other words, it is impossible for a QEO to change health care benefits in any way. The new contract contains some changes and in this way comes closer to satisfying the expressed desires of those who voted against it.

The two ways to win concessions on healthcare are via negotiations or arbitration. MMSD “gave away” the option of unconditional arbitration (and won some concessions via negotiations). Robert Butler of the Wisconsin Association of School Boards (and MMSD bargaining team) cautions “careful consideration” before risking arbitration and identifies four conditions that should be present before a district contemplates this option: “excessive postemployment benefit costs, high health insurance premiums, declining enrollment and a small fund balance.” In comparison to districts around the state (the comparables that an arbitrator would use), MMSD clearly doesn’t meet two of these conditions (postemployment costs and declining enrollment) and is borderline on the others. Seeking healthcare concessions via arbitration does not look like a winning strategy. So much for the “huge bargaining chip.”

Those who voted against the contract gave four reasons that I recall. I’m unclear about the one that had to do with retirees. Another had to do with a quickly corrected misstatement in MTI’s summary of the terms. The healthcare benefit/salary ratio and the supposed effect of this on MMSD’s competitiveness in attracting and retaining quality teachers was the big one and this was linked to the last: concerns about the turnout at the union contract ratification vote. Although members of the minority averred of a desire to “interfere in internal union politics” it is hard to see these last three as anything else (and additionally a way to score points with anti-union voters in future elections).

Before turning to the effect of this attempted interference, I want to quickly address the realities of MMSD’s competitiveness. I’m second to none in my desire for well compensated teachers (salaries and benefits). Both the 1% salary increase and the 4% total package increase are less than I wish the district could provide, but the state finance system doesn’t allow that. The implication is that MMSD salaries are not competitive or will soon cease to be competitive. All evidence is that this is not true. The Wisconsin Association of School Boards collects salary data from districts. In 2006-7 out of 104 districts reporting, MMSD ranked 20th in BA starting salary; 10th in BA and 6 years; 7th in BA max; 39th in MA base; 33d in MA and 9 years; and 43d in MA max. MMSD recently had the highest starting salaries of any surrounding districts. National surveys show that Wisconsin salaries now lag behind those of other midwestern states and MMSD salaries (higher than the state average) seem to be at about the regional average. If MMSD does have difficulty attracting teachers (and I have yet to see any evidence that this is true), I would guess that it is because potential recruits recognize that the state finance system works against job security by forcing “last hired, first fired” cuts. I think that working toward state finance reform will be more effective in raising our teacher salaries than symbolic votes and unsupported assertions about salary competitiveness.

Various school board members have sought to undermine the solidarity of the union by focusing on the differential benefits of those who choose various health plans and have gone so far as saying that it is the “early and mid career” teachers they care about (presumably to the exclusion of our most experienced staff). Exacerbating these divisions is one consequence of their votes against the contract. The success of our schools depends on our teachers working together as teams. Pitting one group of teachers against another can destroy the collegiality of our teaching staff and harm the education of our children. I guess that a minority of the Board thought the benefits of their symbolic vote justified that risk (I am not clear what the supposed benefits are, maybe exacerbating these divisions, but that would be interfering in union politics and they said they weren’t doing that…it gets confusing).

There were also numerous references to the “low” turnout at the union ratification vote. One board member said the turnout was 1%, the number floating around now is about 100 union members voted the only news report I’ve seen put the number at “about 200” or a bit under 10%. Not a huge turnout but also in no way evidence that some silent majority of the union opposed the contract. We hear a lot about MTI’s supposed failure to represent the interests of the membership. If this were true, if dissatisfaction were widespread then it should have been easy to mobilize 200 teachers to vote against the contract. The voices of dissatisfaction point to short notice as a reason for their failure to mobilize. The MTI Bargaining Committee is elected by the membership and there is plenty of notice for those elections. The committee has 15 positions, with 5 up for election each year. This year and last only one of those seats was contested. The Lord helps those who help themselves, but apparently three school board members want to help those who can’t be bothered to help themselves. Maybe they should consider the union members as adults, fully capable of understanding and acting on their interests and not arrogantly seek to undermine the expressed will of the teachers via the established procedures of their legal agent instead of trying to impose what they think is best for others.

I can imagine circumstances where the best interests of the district require the consideration of going to arbitration in an attempt to gain a better contract than what the QEO requires. That is not what happened here (there is little hope of a better contract and no hope on the issues raised by the nay voters) and these circumstances do not exist in MMSD.

I’m tired of writing about health insurance, teacher contracts and the QEO. I’d much rather spend my time and energy on other things. However, as long as some insist on continuing to play political games by using this issue, I’m sure I will continue to put in my 2 cents.

Some are praising those who voted against contract. I hope that this post makes the following clear:

1. The stated goals of those voting against the contract could not be achieved via continued negotiations.

2. Voting down the contract would have weakened the district’s bargaining position and may have led to a ruling that the district had not met good faith criteria.

3. The members who voted against the contract did so knowing that they would lose and they would not be held responsible for the above.

4. Health care savings cannot be achieved by imposing a Qualified Economic Offer.

5. The possibility of arbitration without conditions that the impasse agreement took off the table offered little hope of achieving the stated goals of those who voted against the contract and opposed the impasse agreement.

6. All the evidence indicates that MMSD salaries at all levels, but especially at the lower levels, are competitive.

7. The vote against the contract and the accompanying statements undermine teacher collegiality and morale, to the detriment of our children.

8. Teachers who are dissatisfied with MTI’s bargaining goals and the contract have made little effort to change the former or block ratification of the latter.

There is nothing praiseworthy and much to condemn in what the minority did and their use of unsupportable claims to justify their actions.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Accountability Manifesto

Jim Horn (of Schools Matter, The Education Policy Blog and Monmouth University) thinks it is time turn the tables on the “failing businessmen and politicians” who have been promoting and legislating ill-conceived accountability requirements for our schools and start demanding that they be held accountable for their failures.

Jim has posted an initial list and I think it is a good one.

§ all American citizens will have health insurance coverage that offers equal coverage and facilities for mental and physical health;

§ the federal government will have devised a menu of school integration plans from which school systems across America will choose in order to live up the Supreme Court decision of 53 years ago which declared that separate schools are inherently unequal;

§ American business and government will deliver to the American people a practical plan for full employment in jobs that offer livable wages;

§ All families in America will be offered affordable and quality child care whose cost will be based on income;

§ A minimum wage, workmen’s compensation, and social security withholding will be provided to all workers, both citizens and immigrants. Businesses that do not comply will be forced to close until they do comply.

§ State governments and the federal government will devise a funding structure for public schools that is not dependent upon property taxes.

§ Business and government will take the action required to reduce greenhouse emissions of Americans to a level that will sustain a healthy planet.

§ A national action plan that includes private and public commitments will be offered to rebuild the infrastructure of America, to offer adequate and affordable housing for all Americans, to reenergize the arts, to enhance our parks.

§ Once these things are done, American businessmen and politicians, if they still have the urge to do so, may continue their public school reform initiatives–if they are willing to include the public in each and every step of their reformations. Otherwise, forget it.

I’d add something about a just system of taxation. What else belongs here?

Thomas J. Mertz

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5-4-3-2-1

5-4-3-2-1, by Manfred Mann (listen)

5 school board members expressed opposition to the Lampham/Marquette consolidation.

1 (only 1) said “I will not vote to close any school in the District.”

2 school board members introduced amendments that would have stopped the consolidation of Lapham/Marquette.

4 school board members voted in favor of at least one of the amendments that would have stopped the consolidation of Lapham/Marquette.

1 school board member introduced an amendment that required the consolidation of Lapham/Marquette.

3 other school board members supported this amendment. It passed.

That 1 school board member, who did not vote in favor of any of the amendments that would have stopped the consolidation and introduced the amendment that required the consolidation, is the only one who said they would “never vote to close any school in the District.”

Thomas J. Mertz

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We Are Not Alone #10

The referendum in Horicon failed by a vote of 873 to 683. Now they face the familiar choices:

“We are going to have to make a determination if we are going to fund the program or cut programs,” David Westimayer said.

They are also looking to continue leveraging municipal finances. As Madison moves in this direction, we may face similar problems:

The district-wide recreation program with the YMCA of Dodge County will be on the agenda of the May 21 board meeting.

“It is the same contract at the same cost,” McCartney said, noting that money previously received from the city has dried up.

He noted that city sponsorship would benefit only Horicon residents, while the district funding the program benefits everyone living within the district.

Thomas J. Mertz

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