Category Archives: Local News

Things to Think About (Budget Issues)

The MMSD Board of Education will be attempting to reach an initial balanced budget on Monday (the final budget is done in October). The Board members and many in the community have been thinking, writing and talking about the budget for months. With less then 24 hours to go, I’d like to put forth some questions and thoughts that I think would be beneficial to contemplate. No polemics or easy answers, but some ways of thinking about things.

1. On all the cuts or consolidations, which would be seriously considered if there weren’t extreme budget pressures?

I said extreme on purpose because there always are and should be budget pressures and those pressures should always be part of the calculations. I understand that there are potential benefits to the consolidation plans and even some of departmental and program reconfigurations, but I am asking how these would weigh or appear if the district could afford “cost to continue” or faced much smaller cuts. This question doesn’t provide much guidance for decision-making, but I do think it shines a light on how our thinking has become dominated by the pressures of a deeply flawed school finance system.

2. What’s wrong, right and true about political pressure?

I’m starting this with the last, because it is the easiest. A look at election results and district maps makes it pretty clear that neither in this budget cycle nor in previous cycles can the decisions of Board members (including on consolidations) be accurately attributed to pandering to bases of support (geographic or otherwise). To state or imply otherwise is an insult to past and present Board members. Three recent examples should suffice to demonstrate how absurd this idea is. Of all the recent Board members Arlene Silviera is the only one who can reasonably be said to have won her seat on the basis of Isthmus area support (and the reality is more complicated, but it is reasonable to say that). Arlene is on record as favoring consolidating Isthmus area schools. Strike one. Strike two is that Johnny Winston Jr. was the only candidate this spring to express a willingness to close schools, was re-elected overwhelmingly (garnering majorities in all parts of the district) and is now working to avoid consolidation. If you want a strike three, the strongest voice against consolidation, Carol Carstensen has stated she will not run for re-election.

What is wrong and right is complex. I don’t think any of us want Board members who cravenly count votes and shape their actions to please some portion of the electorate. I also think that we want Board members who are responsive to the expressed desires of their constituents. The balance between these is hard to describe.

Board members should have a sense of trying to do what they were elected to do, of serving in a way that is consistent with how they campaigned. That has to mean that the desires of those who voted for them should be given more weight than the desires of those who didn’t. This is basic to governance by elected officials. More weight doesn’t mean that other views are ignored. I’m not a fan of most uses of the word “accountability” in educational policy, but the accountability of elected Board members to the electorate is one place I’m happy to employ it. Mostly we vote for Board members based on a sense of shared ideals or values and trust that person to use these to make the hard decisions. After three years the electorate gets another shot. A final word on this is that I think most of our recent and current Board members have been good about considering the diverse views of people in all areas of the district and think that electing the Board by geographic areas would induce the kind of narrow pandering that we have mostly avoided.

3. What are the appropriate amounts for the Fund Balance (that’s the state term, MMSD seems to use “fund equity”) in general and the “salary savings” calculation in this budget cycle?

These are obviously related, because a miscalculation of “salary savings” will result in a decrease in the Fund Balance account. The Fund Balance is the district’s long-term contingency, emergency, rainy day account. If gas prices triple or there are bad projections with the state or local budget the Fund Balance is used to make up the difference. In one sense it seems obvious that healthy Fund Balance account is good, you want to be prepared for emergencies and it can impact the bond rating. But is the desire for fiscal surety more important than the desire to educate our children the best way we know how? What level of risk can be justified? In Madison, over the last seven or eight years close to half of the Fund Balance has been spent. There was a period of aggressive budgeting — of prioritizing education over finances — that combined with some hits which could not have been anticipated and some that maybe should have (but weren’t) to leave the Fund Balance at little over 7% of the operating budget. I want to emphasize that although the money is gone, those of us who think the district does a good job with the core educational mission believe that it was well spent.

Still, as the account gets smaller it is appropriate to ask how small is too small? The DPI is little help:

The most commonly asked question regarding fund balance is how large should it be? Perhaps the best answer would be: “an amount sufficient that short term borrowing for cash flow could be avoided and would also allow the district to set aside sufficient assets to realize its longer range goals.” However, this may not always be practical or politically possible. The school board must make a policy decision as to the extent they will borrow for cash flow rather maintaining a working cash balance.

Obviously under the current state school finance system the idea of setting aside anything for long-term goals is a cruel joke. I don’t believe we have been forced into much (any?) short term borrowing, so we are good there. I’ve looked at other districts policies and some require a Fund Balance of between 10% and 15% of the operating budget. 15% seems excessive to me. In contrast, the state finance system and the failures of referenda have led Wisconsin Heights to run a growing deficit in their Fund Balance recently. I’d guess (and it is only a guess) that something about 10% of the operating budget is the ideal. I think that as the Board looks to a February 2008 referendum, dedicating some of the authorized money to building the Fund Balance should be considered.

The “salary savings” figure in the budget represents money budgeted for salaries but not spent. I think most of this comes from positions that go unfilled for a day or a week or months. In a large operation like MMSD this can add up. How much it adds up to is the question. In recent years the budgeted amount for “salary savings” has been about $6 million. The administration has not given (or their accounting does not produce) an actual figure for salary savings these years but points to the spending down of the Fund Balance as evidence that the budgeted amounts were too optimistic. Perhaps due to this, the administration used a $1 million figure for the current 2007-8 budget materials. $2 million was used in the “Parameters Used to Build” document earlier this year, so this doesn’t seem to be an exact science. The decreases in the Fund Balance are partially attributable to over optimistic “salary savings” projections (but also other factors such as unanticipated changes in state Special Education funding, tuition income…) and even if it was all attributable, the projections have not been off by $5 million a year (it looks like less than $3 million). I don’t have either the professional or elected responsibilities of evaluating this (I know it is much easier on the sidelines), but it seems to me that in light of what I do know, a “salary savings” projection of $3 million or even $3.5 million would not be unreasonable. Remember, it isn’t like the money will be squandered; the choice is between spending it to educate our children or keeping it to safeguard against emergencies.

I don’t claim that any of this – making decisions in order to do the least harm, serving those who voted for you and those who didn’t, balancing long-term security with pressing needs — is clear cut or easy. These are hard choices. I respect our Board members for their willingness to make them, and wish them all the best as they work through the conflicts and contradictions. I hope what I posted here (at my usual excessive length) may help either Board members or the interested public understand the choices (and how hard they are) a little better.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Where is the QEO?

Susan Troller’s story on the MTI/MMSD negotiations and the health care issue is timely and informative. It is a good story, except one thing is missing and that is any mention of the Qualified Economic Offer law (and one thing seems to me to be misrepresented and that is Madison’s competitiveness for starting teacher salaries — I’m saving this for another post, but see here, scroll down to “News Flash,” thanks Robert).

I know that the impasse agreement (reproduced here) negotiated earlier this year moves the parties away from the QEO, but it remains part of the context and should be discussed.

The QEO requires districts that wish to avoid arbitration to offer each year a total package that is at least 3.8% larger than the previous contract. Total package means salary and benefits combined. With health care costs rising that has meant very small salary increases for Madison’s teachers. Last year the total package went up 3.97% (compared to the State average of 4.29%; I think that in Madison .8% of that was salary and the rest benefits, statewide I think the salary figure is a little over 3% and that the increase in health costs has been above 7% – correct me if I’m wrong — info here and here). This mix or balance has been their choice, how they have wished to “spend” their 3.8%. The state says this is their money and that health care is part of collective bargaining.

The lack of any discussion of the QEO leads to the misconception that money saved on health care could be used to avoid staff and programmatic cuts. I have heard a figure of $2 million, but I don’t see where that would come from (I may be missing something and am open to being informed, corrected or educated).

Robert Butler of the Wisconsin Association of School Boards (and part of MMSD’s negotiating team) identifies a number of reasons that districts should seek to lower health care costs, some of these are good and some not so good but I don’t see any that will have a significant impact on programmatic cuts. The first is that teachers having higher (and higher cost) benefits than many in their communities is bad for public relations. In Madison, we know this is true but I would guess that much of this has to do with ignorance about the total compensation aspects of the QEO (ignorance that is reinforced with every story or discussion of teacher health care that does not include a discussion of the QEO). The second is the undeniable effect on teacher salaries. As I said above, that is their choice; our teachers know that higher benefit packages in lean times and under the QEO mean lower salaries. Butler also points out that many districts are moving away from work shares, part time positions and increasing the workload of employees. He attributes this to a wish to avoid insuring additional people. I’m sure that is part of the picture, but common sense tells me that this is a manifestation of the quixotic quest for efficiency inspired more by the broken state finance system than by health care costs. Butler’s last reason is the only one that I see (again, correct me if I’m wrong) as having the potential to increase the amount of money a district has to maintain programs (or keep schools open):

The cost of health insurance has driven up school districts’ post-employment benefit costs dramatically. Post-employment costs are not part of the total compensation calculation used for a qualified economic offer (QEO). This has three major implications. First, it constitutes a significant drag on district budgets. Second, it doesn’t allow the school district to assess this cost within the parameters of a QEO. Third, it means that money saved on insurance modifications for retirees can be accrued to the district.

If I understand correctly, savings achieved through lower cost health care for retirees would not have to be converted to another part of the total package calculation and therefore would represent money that could be spent elsewhere. This might be the source of the $2 million dollar figure. If it is, I’d like to see the calculations because the post-employment health care benefits aren’t very big and anecdotally I’ve heard that many (most?) Madison teachers switch to the HMO option upon retirement (leaving WPS with the higher cost individuals and further driving up rates).

It may seem like I’m defending the choices MTI has made. I’m not. That discussion is best left to their membership. I am (indirectly) defending collective bargaining.

Since this is a public matter, I do think that actions on both sides of the bargaining table need to be presented to the public in their full context. In this case that means placeing front and center the way the QEO functions to limit the potential impact of one aspect of the contract (health care) on the district’s budgetary choices. What I am really interested in defending and furthering is informed discussion.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under AMPS, Budget, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, School Finance

Board of Education Budget Amendments

All the proposed amendments have now been posted. Nothing is final till the votes (not the proposals) are counted, but it looks like the odds are against school closings this time.

Whatever happens, there will be cuts that will make it much harder for our schools to do the important jobs we’ve given them.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Finding the Money for Schools

Mike Ivey in today’s Cap Times on Wal-mart’s Wisconsin operations:

The next time you make the not-so-scenic drive on U.S. 151 past the giant new Wal-Mart warehouse near Beaver Dam, keep this in mind: Wisconsin’s largest employer draws more in corporate welfare than it pays in state taxes.

But according to a report from the Milwaukee-based Institute for Wisconsin’s Future that somehow fell through the cracks on Tax Day, Wal-Mart has used a variety of completely legal tax avoidance schemes to cut millions from its state tax bill.

Using public records, the group determined that Wal-Mart pocketed $852 million in net profits in Wisconsin off value-hungry consumers between 2000 and 2003.

Over that same period, Wal-Mart paid only $3 million in corporate income tax here. That’s a tax rate of 0.35 percent, a fraction of the 7.9 percent rate corporations doing business in our fair state are supposed to pay.

Pardon my West High math, but if Wal-Mart paid the going tax rate here it would have owed closer to $67 million.

At the same time, Wal-Mart has been feeding at the public trough like nobody else in state history. The Arkansas-based retailer has benefited from more than $20 million in public economic benefits in Wisconsin, according to one national study. Good Jobs First reported in 2004 that Wal-Mart stores and distribution centers in Baraboo, Beaver Dam, Menomonie, Milwaukee and Tomah received at least $21.75 million in local tax subsidies, the report says.

And in a related story:

The death of Helen Walton, a major Wal-Mart stockholder and widow of its founder, may well trigger one of history’s biggest charitable donations, with a potentially dramatic impact on U.S. public education reform.

Helen Walton’s stake in Wal-Mart is worth about $16.4 billion, which ranked her No. 29 on the most recent Forbes list of the world’s richest. She had long planned to shift her Wal-Mart stock to the Walton Family Foundation upon her death, the family has said. That foundation is overseen by her children and advisers. It has become a major backer of public education reform, including charter schools and private-school vouchers. A donation that big would significantly expand the foundation’s reach.

Charters and vouchers. $16,400,000,000. It makes the mind reel. This isn’t money for “public education reform,” it is money for public education destruction. It is bad enough to avoid paying a fair share and to exploit corporate welfare, but to turn around and then use those ill gotten gains to destroy our public schools is unconscionable. Better if she had left all to her cat.

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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Filed under AMPS, Elections, Local News, Referenda, School Finance, We Are Not Alone

Taking Action (Local)

A couple of local actions in the works, mostly on the consolidation plans.

Thomas J. Mertz

1. Kennedy Heights Community Center with the support of many other individuals and groups is organizing a walk from Kennedy Heights Community Center to Gompers Elementary School to raise awareness about the potential closings of Lindbergh Elementary School and Black Hawk middle school. Neighborhood Schools are a community resource for the children and families in Kennedy Heights and the northside; closing the schools would negatively impact our neighborhood, our community center, and the families that live here. Please come and walk with us to keep northside schools open.

The walk will start at the Kennedy Heights Community Center at 4:00 PM on Monday April 23rd – we will walk together from Kennedy Heights to Gompers Elementary school about 1.3 miles. At Gompers their will be a brief discussion and Popsicles for kids. All are welcome please distribute widely.

PS I know that school board members have a meeting at 5:00 PM, but I hope you can join us
for the beginning of our walk.

2. Join a grassoots rally: “An Hour For Marquette” – On Friday, April 27, from 1:30 – 2:30 come to Marquette and pull your Marquette student from class to protest the proposed consolidation (All concerned parents, students, and other community members are welcome to join in). We will rally at the school. Bring a sign that expresses your feeling about Marquette. We will be working to get press coverage and a visit from the Mayor. If you are interested in attending the rally e-mail Dea Larsen Converse at dealarsen@yahoo.com or Maria Moreno at mcmoreno@tds.net so we can give a head count to the papers.
(Note that this is not a PTG sponsored event)
It’s not over yet! Let’s keep the pressure on!

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Operation Loud & Proud

Lots of grassroots action on school funding issues happening locally. One I particularly like is from my son’s Language Arts and Life Skills teacher, Jon Hawkins. Jon has set up two letter writing workshops to help “anyone who is involved in the lives of our children and concerned about the future of their education…[to] speak out” more effectively. The workshops will be held at JC Wright Middle School Thursday April 26th (6:00 to 7:30 PM) and Saturday April 28th (12:00 Noon to 1:00 PM). More details here, including an offer to try to secure childcare and translation services.

My understanding is that students are encouraged to attend and write letters. Those of us who were at the Sondy Pope Roberts press conference know how effective the voices of students can be.

I don’t know if this is officially part of the “social action” component of the Wright charter, but I do think it is appropiate that a Language Arts and Life Skills teacher help others use language to participate in the legislative process. This is civic education of the best sort.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under AMPS, Best Practices, Budget, Local News, School Finance, Take Action

Next Steps on School Finance Reform: Take Action NOW

The Wisconsin Assembly has referred the Pope-Roberts resolution to reform public school finance by July 2009 to the “Education Reform” committee, chaired by Rep. Don Pridemore of Hartford in Washington County.

People should be contacting Rep. Pridemore (267-2367, Rep.Pridemore@legis.wisconsin.gov) to push for a Legislative hearing on school finance reform.
People in Pridmore’s district ESPECIALLY need to be contacting him.

Here’s a map of his district.

If any of you have contact to the Waukesha parents yesterday or know of people in Rep. Pridemore’s district, please pass on his phone number to them and have them call his office. This is the time to exert some pressure to push for a hearing on school finance. A hearing is a way to push the issue to the top of the pile of issues the Legislature must address.

Beth Swedeen

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Filed under AMPS, Local News, Pope-Roberts/Breske Resolution, School Finance, Take Action

My Referendum and Budget Letter

April 19, 2007
Members of the MMSD Board of Education
545 West Dayton Street
Madison, WI 53703

I am asking today that the Board of Education begin planning for an operating referendum to be held on February 19th, 2008 and pending the outcome of that referendum refrain from closing schools and eliminating programs that will be difficult to restart.

The budget recommendations presented by the administration are not unreasonable, but they are far from desirable. The broken state finance system has forced the consideration of many undesirable options. The consolidation plans and the elimination of strings would be difficult to undo and would cause long range harm to our community’s faith in and support for our schools. I believe that there are other, also undesirable but less irreparable ways to balance the 2007-2008 budget. A successful well-designed referendum would move the district’s budget discussions from trying to do the least harm to trying to do the most good.

Referenda are not easy; they require the board to have the courage to say there is no other way, they require hard work on the part of volunteer community members willing to educate the electorate on the good our schools do and the harm being done by the state finance system, they divide our communities and can reveal a loss of faith in our schools, or Board members and our administration. They are also the only tool we have to under the current system to assure that our children get the education they deserve and our community is allowed to support the schools as we wish. I sat through many of the Special Joint Committee on School Finance sessions in 2006. As district after district related heartbreaking stories of the cuts they had made due to the broken school funding system, they were told again and again by some committee members that best and only answer was to “go to referendum.” I don’t believe it is the only answer – I am one of many in Madison and statewide who are working to fix that system – but it is the only answer we have in the short term.

Many in Madison believe that a referendum is needed now or will at very least be needed for the 2008-2009 budget. School closings will make this referendum more difficult to pass.

Referenda are often called band-aids. There is some truth to this in that they do not provide a long-term cure to the ills of under funded schools. However, they do staunch the bleeding and buy time for a cure to be obtained. If your child were bleeding, you would use whatever was at hand to stop that bleeding before they suffered irreparable harm. That is what I am asking the board to do.

I am not alone in this. You will be receiving a letter with close to 150 signatures, asking the same thing. These signatories and those who collected them have demonstrated their willingness to do the work to educate the community and work for the passage of a referendum. Please have the courage give them that chance and give the voters of Madison the opportunity to make their voices heard at the ballot box.

Thomas J. Mertz

J.C. Wright Middle School Parent
2007-2008 Franklin-Randall Parent
Member MMSD Equity Task Force
Member Advocates for Madison Public Schools
Co-Chair Communities and Schools Together
Member Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools

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Filed under AMPS, Budget, Equity, Local News, Referenda, School Finance, Take Action

Listen to Emerson Verse on WSUM 91.7 FM Thursday, April 19th 1 – 2 p.m.

Emerson verse to air on radio
Susan Troller
The Capital Times

It’s fitting that students from Emerson Elementary School will be performing their original poetry on a local radio show on Thursday. After all, their school is the namesake of Ralph Waldo Emerson, one of America’s most famous essayists and literary figures, and April is National Poetry Month.

But when you ask the kids why they like poetry, they don’t talk about history or literature. They just say it’s fun.

Whether it’s a simple “Roses are red, violets are blue, That’s all I can think of, What about you?” or a longer piece on heroic sled dogs, clearly the Emerson students get a kick out of using language to make a creative point.

About 50 students from first through fifth grades have been working on a poetry project with their teachers and volunteer Paul Baker, host of WSUM’s “Wordsalad,” a weekly poetry show on the UW-Madison student station.

Baker has been recording the students’ words and will present them, backed by music, on his radio show Thursday from 1 to 2 p.m. WSUM is at 91.7 FM on the radio dial or can be accessed online. Baker said that it appears that this project combining student poetry and a radio broadcast is unique in the U.S.

Baker, who has a professional job working for the Wisconsin Center for Educational Research, does his radio show as a voluntary labor of love. The genesis for the program came when he discovered there was a large body of poetry recorded in the poets’ original voices.

“There’s poetry recorded by people like Sylvia Plath and Gertrude Stein and, of course, all kinds of new young voices. These words, spoken by their authors, are rarely heard, and I thought that might make interesting radio,” Baker explained.

“There is this bright, shining and pure quality to what elementary kids write, and how they say it,” he added. “It’s refreshing to hear.”

Last fall, Baker began talking with an old friend, Denise Janssen, who is a special education teacher at Emerson, about his radio show. He told her he’d like to include elementary school student poets on the show, and would like to do it in time for National Poetry Month.

Teachers found the project a good complement to their curriculum.

“Poetry enhances vocabulary and encourages fluency, smoothness, rhythm and cadence in language arts,” first-grade teacher Rosy Bayuk said. “It’s fun and playful for all kids, and for the students who are linguistically creative, it’s a wonderful outlet for expression. It really hooks them on writing, and reading.”

posted by Janet Morrow

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