Category Archives: Take Action

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

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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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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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State Budget Passes JFC – Vote With Your Feet

carpetbaggerThe Committee on Joint Finance voting along party lines,  passed the budget bill at 5:30 this morning (Friday May 29, 2009).  It now goes to the Senate and Assembly, where passage along party lines is also anticipated.

The WisPolitics Budget Blog has all the details.

The text is here, it looks little changed from the deal reached earlier this week.

News reports from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and the Wisconsin State Journal are linked here.

The Journal Sentinel also has a good  editorial on the lack of openness in the process.

My quick guesstimate is that the budget deal will mean nearly $3 million less in revenue for the Madison Metropolitan School District.  Cuts are coming, here and elsewhere.

What to do?

State elections are not till November 2010, but you can show your displeasure with the education portions of the budget by voting with your feet, joining the Walk on the Child’s Side on June 16.  The march begins at Library Mall at 11:00 AM and the rally on the steps of the Capitol will be at Noon.

Be there.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Back in Stride — Walk On the Child’s Side Update

From the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools:

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

Make a statement for school-funding reform

* Your legislators will be invited to walk with us. Make sure they are there representing, you, your community, and your children.

* Speakers at the Capitol will include Randy Braun, Walk on the Child’s Side veteran and superintendent of the Cameron School District; Randy Kunsch, CARE member and Walk veteran; Mary Bell, WEAC president; Art Rainwater, former Madison school district superintendent and Walk veteran; and Jennifer Morales, Walk veteran and former Milwaukee school board member. Other speakers, including students, will be added.

* Off-site parking will be available with shuttle buses running to and from the event.

* Bring and sign or banner telling who you are and where you are from. Event organizers will have materials to make signs at the last minute.

* Wear your original Walk on the Child’s Side shirt. Some will be available on a first-come, first-served basis.

A decade after the first Walk on the Child’s Side and 15 years since the state’s school-funding system was passed into law, not much has changed except that the funding crisis has deepened among Wisconsin’s public school children and schools. If you come to Madison for the anniversary Walk, you will make an important statement on behalf of those children, their schools, and all of our futures.

The Walk on the Child’s Side will begin at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Library Mall at 11 a.m. and end at the Capitol. Several speakers will talk about the history of school-funding reform and call for legislative action. Walkers will end the day visiting with their elected officials to ask them to work together for comprehensive reform. What’s new since the last update Sponsors of the 10th anniversary Walk on the Child’s Side are Price County Citizens Who CARE, Northern Tier Uniserv, and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools. If this isn’t the biggest and best Walk, legislators and the Governor won’t get the message.

Download a flier here.  Save the date and spread the word!

Thomas J. Mertz

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“Walk on the Child’s Side” June 16 — Don’t Forget

phillips1Don’t forget to save the date for the June 16, “Walk on the Child Side” 10th anniversy school funding action.

In light of the recent budget moves in Wisconsin, this action has never been more necessary.

WEAC has a good page up on the event, here is what they have to say:

School funding reform rally is June 16 in Madison

Ten years after a group of northern Wisconsin educators first walked across the state to draw attention to the need to reform school funding, they will return to Madison for a rally focusing on the fact that “the kids are still waiting.” And everyone who supports school funding reform is invited and encouraged to attend.

The school funding reform rally will begin at 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 16, at the Library Mall on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. Participants will march to the State Capitol and rally on the Capitol steps.

“We need to help our legislators understand that we can’t wait much longer,” according to a flier supporting the rally. “We need to help our kids now.”

The rally marks the 10-year anniversary of the first Walk on the Child’s Side, a 240-mile march along Wisconsin highways, from Butternut to Madison, to draw attention to the plight of school districts and Wisconsin’s children as a result of a failed system of school funding. Walk on the Child’s Side was held for four years.

This year’s rally is sponsored by the Price County Citizens Who CARE (the original sponsor of Walk on the Child’s Side), the Northern Tier UniServ, and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools.

WEAC President Mary Bell, who participated in the original Walk on the Child’s Side, said WEAC supports the 10-year reunion rally. She will attend and encourages all supporters of school funding reform to join in the march and rally.

“Despite the realities of Wisconsin’s economic recession, our advocacy for school funding reform must continue in full stride,” Bell said. “When the economy turns around, we need to have all eyes focused on school funding reform as the top priority for reinvestment.”

Teri Hanson, a representative of CARE and a key organizer of the original walks, said this year’s event will be a celebration of how far the funding reform movement has come and, more importantly, will deliver a message to state government that “Wisconsin’s schools are in crisis and the governor and Legislature have ignored it for far too long.”

The event will include live entertainment and speeches. Organizers are working on convenient parking locations and shuttle buses to make attendance as easy as possible.

Information updates will be provided on the WAES Web site at www.excellentschools.org.

The rally is timely, as the Legislature debates the 2009-11 state budget. According to the Legislature’s calendar, budget deliberations will begin on June 9 and run through June 30. Participants are encouraged to bring signs and banners and to schedule visits with their lawmakers while in Madison.

Sponsors are asking participants to:

  1. Make sure your group or organization is behind this event.
  2. Talk to your school board about bringing a bus load of school and community members for the day.
  3. Start a phone tree and begin arranging some car pools.
  4. Discuss your community’s participation at meetings of your clubs, organizations, or groups.
  5. Tell your legislators you expect them to attend and then make sure they do.
  6. Use your organizing skills to make sure you bring at least 10 people with you … or more.

For more information:

Be there! Make your voice heard!.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Action Alert

action alert

You can make a difference by letting the members of the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee know you expect them to use common sense and take a balanced approach to working through the state’s financial crisis. We solve nothing if we dismantle our schools and other important public services. Right now:

  • Pass along this e-mail alert to as many other people as you can.E-mail members of the
  • Joint Finance Committee (click here for their e-mail addresses — http://www.legis.state.wi.us/lfb/jfc.html) with your suggestions about dealing with the gap.

Thanks.

Tom

Thomas S. Beebe, Executive Director
Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools


More on AMPS, here and here and a sample message here.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Sow and Reap – More on the Wisconsin State Budget

Jean-Francois Millet, The Gleaners, 1857

Jean-Francois Millet, The Gleaners, 1857

You can only reap what you sow and it looks like Governor Jim Doyle’ s reluctance to reap and sow may be leading Wisconsin to more hard times and lean years.

In a statement today reported by the Journal Sentinel, Governor Doyle indicated that in response to revenue shortfalls, a new proposal requiring 5% cuts in state aid to public schools and local governments is in the works (more here). These would be devastating to programs and services that are already strained.

He used the word “forced,” but in very similar terms to the Republicans, who in the last budget cycle, claimed to have been “forced” to cut aid when they were acting on their own volition, the “forcing” Doyle refers to is in fact a choice being made by the Governor himself.

As previously noted (here and here), there is much potential for Wisconsin to restructure our revenue choices to meet these shortfalls and move toward an equitable and sustainable tax structure.

The Institute for Wiscosin’s Future (IWF) put out a “cliff notes” one page version of the Catalog of Tax Reform Options for Wisconsin today . Here it is:

Tax Reform Option

Taxpayers Affected

Annual Fiscal Impact

(FY2010-‘11)

INCOME TAX OPTIONS
Reinstate the estate tax with a $1 million exemption: When Wisconsin last had this, rates ranged from 0.8% to 16%, averaging 5%. Forty percent or more could be offset by a lower federal tax. The estates of Wisconsin’s wealthiest—about 1% of those dying each year. Estates left to surviving spouses would not be taxed. $21 million FY10; $85 million FY11
Tax 100% of capital gains: Wisconsin now taxes only 40% of capital gains; Governor’s budget proposal would increase that to 60% Investors who profit from sales of stocks, bonds, real estate and other assets. IRS says over 70% of capital gains go to persons with incomes above $100,000. $170 million FY10; $192 million FY11
Increase from 6.75% to 8.75% the income tax on taxable income above $300,000 for joint filers and $225,000 for single filers. Governor’s budget proposal would raise the rate to 7.75%. High-income taxpayers. A couple with $400,000 taxable income would pay $2,000 more, some of that offset by lower federal taxes. $362 million FY10; $272 million FY11
SALES TAX OPTIONS
Extend the sales tax to personal services:

(Such as beauty, barber and other personal care; vets for pets; health clubs; admission to educational events/ places; dues to fraternal organizations; auto club fees; funerals.

Primarily Wisconsin households, though businesses would pay a share. $93 million FY10; $96 million FY11
Increase the state sales tax rate from 5 cents per dollar to 6 cents 82% of the increase would be paid by Wisconsin residents, 9% by state businesses and 9% by residents of other states. $806 million FY10; $847 million FY11

Note: Fiscal impacts based on latest Department of Revenue and Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimates.

The IWF is also a co-sponsor of a press conference bringing people together to “Speak Up for a Budget the Puts People First” (click on the title for more information and a a flier). It is being held next Tuesday, May 19, at 9:30 AM in the State Senate Parlor. Be there if you can.

The ball is also in the Joint Finance Committee’s court. What ever Doyle proposes, they have a big say in the process. It is absolutely essential that they hear from constituents that new revenues are the only way we can sow for a bountiful future. The Committee is chaired by Madison’s Mark Pocan and Monona’s Mark Miller. All the contact info is here. They need to hear from you! A quick call, an email, anything.

The Journal Sentinel story also noted:

A 5% cut would cost schools about $258 million, although some of that could be offset by federal stimulus money (emphasis added).

Confusion still reigns on the stimulus funds. Two quick clarifications may help. First, the “flow through” money has already been earmarked to pay for a large chunk of the state’s share of the inadequate allowable revenue (the inadequate allowable revenue increases have been almost entirely shifted to property taxes). That horse has left the barn. Second, the general rule for the other stimulus money (Title I and IDEA) is to “supplement not supplant.” There are some loopholes, but they aren’t big enough to absorb this hit. In terms of general operating revenues, the stimulus has been basically spent already. Let’s stop pretending otherwise.

Come the the press conference. Get those notes and calls done. This is important.

Thomas J. Mertz

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A Message to State Officials — My Budget Letter

Madison May Day Rally 2009, photo Dace Zeps, click on image for more information.

Madison May Day Rally 2009, photo Dace Zeps, click on image for more information.

There are lots of ways to get a message to elected officials.  You can march and rally, like many of us did on May Day in support of a variety of causes and many more of us will on June 16 to call for long-overdue school funding reform.  You can testify at a hearing like the supporters of the School Finance Network did recently.  You can visit their offices and you can always send a letter.

Here is the letter I sent today.

Governor James Doyle

State Senator Fred Risser

State Representative Mark Pocan

State Capitol
Madison, WI 53708

Dear Sirs

As work on Wisconsin’s biennial budget moves forward, you and your colleagues face increasingly difficult choices.  The current economic crisis and the difficulties you face demand real leadership.

This crisis — in the public and private sectors, at the national, state and local levels – is the product of too many years of looking for quick and easy fixes and savings.  The gimmicks have been exhausted, the savings have been proven illusionary, and the short term view has wrought extensive damage.

It is time to champion a new vision.  Wisconsin needs you to lead the state in a recommitment to a sustainable and progressive system of revenues sufficient to provide the investments in education, social services, health care, and infrastructure necessary for Wisconsin to grow stronger, more prosperous and more equitable.

The Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and the Institute for Wisconsin’s Future have produced a Catalog of Tax Reform Options for Wisconsin.  This document offers many ideas for fair and sustainable revenue policies.  I urge you to put these ideas at the center of your continuing work on the budget.

I am an active citizen, member and supporter of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.  I have volunteered and donated and even hosted a “Take Back the Assembly” fundraiser in the last election cycle.  I’ve done this because I believed in the Democratic platform planks promising “fair taxation,” full funding of educational mandates, and “access to affordable health care,” and more.  These are the ideas that put you into office.  Now, more than ever you need to put these ideas into action.

As we all look forward to the next election cycle, it may be helpful to think about how difficult it will be to hold on to majorities and offices if all you have to offer is “We survived the economic crisis without too much harm and no fundamental changes in our approach to governance.”  Propping up the status quo also contains risks, but it offers few rewards for the citizens or the Democratic Party.  Change was the watchword last November and the increasingly apparent failures of the old way of doing things have only made the demand for change more pressing.

You are in a position to lead that change.  Please be part of building the future our state needs.

Thomas J. Mertz

Send your own letter (info here, feel free to post it in the comments); join the march and rally on June 16!  Take action!

Thomas J. Mertz

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WAES School-Funding Update, the Week of May 11, 2009

waesgraphic

Click on the image to visit the Wisconsin Alliance for Excelent Schools

From the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools.  Headlines/index below, click here for a pdf of the full update, click on the linked items for related posts on AMPS

Thomas J. Mertz

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