Category Archives: Take Action

School Budget Talk — Gov. Doyle and Sup. Nerad and Others

From WKOW, Channel 27, Madison.

Nobody seems to be saying much about what was discussed, but the little that is being said doesn’t sound good.  In fact, it sounds like Governor Doyle is looking for some cover for his previously expressed opinion that “cuts to education..will be necessary.”

Governor Doyle is wrong.  Cuts instead of investments are both unwise and unnecessary.  In these times of economic crisis, Wisconsin needs bold leadership in order to set a new path toward growth.  It would be a huge mistake to continue along the unsustainable “quick fix,” “no new taxes,” road that brought our state and our nation to the edge of collapse and puts our children’s future at risk.

Let your elected officials know that you would support moving Wisconsin in a new and better direction.

Thomas J. Mertz

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

The Wisconsin State Budget Question: Who Has a Backbone?

Clockwise: Chironex Fleckeri, Governor Jim Doyle, State Senator Mark Miller, State Representative Mark Pocan.

Clockwise: Chironex Fleckeri, Governor Jim Doyle, State Senator Mark Miller, State Representative Mark Pocan.

Things have been tough with Wisconsin budget and are even tougher after revenue estimates came up about $1.5 billion short.

The talk from Governor Jim Doyle is now of more cuts, layoffs, pay cuts, and furloughs.

Like George H. W. Bush, Doyle suckered himself into a “no new taxes” pledge years ago. Unlike Bush Sr, Doyle hasn’t had the wisdom or the courage to back away from that position. There are a couple of small exceptions like cigarettes and a slight income tax bump in his most recent biennial budget proposal (you know, the one that uses the stimulus money for a big chunk of the school funding and shifts almost all of the revenue cap increase to property taxes), but Doyle has consistently resisted even things like extending the sales tax to personal services. Doyle also seems perfectly satisfied in ignoring the pledges of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin to “fully fund” educational mandates. This isn’t backbone, it is boneheaded.

Charity Eleson of the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families (WCCF) has the right idea:

“We recognize that the shortfall has become massive and that painful cuts are necessary,” said WCCF Executive Director Charity Eleson. “However, the enormity of the deficit demands that we take a balanced approach to filling the gap. It would be a serious mistake not to include revenue increases in the plan.”

….“We therefore call on policymakers to include revenue increases in the mix as they work to address the budget shortfall. Options such as reducing the tax break on capital gains—currently the most generous in the nation—and reinstating the estate tax, to name just a couple, would help minimize the devastating impact of the state’s revenue problems on the children and families least able to weather the bad economy.”

We’ve had too many years of failed policies; too many years of looking for short term gains and savings instead of seeking a balanced approach to sustainable taxation and investment. This economic crisis should be a wake up call. Trying to cut our way out of this crisis will only extend the failure; Wisconsin needs to begin building for the future again.

The WCCF has joined with the Institute for Wisconsin’s Future to research and publish a Catalog of Tax Reform Options for Wisconsin. Urge your state officials to give consideration to these ideas for moving Wisconsin toward fairer, more sustainable revenue sources to fund the investments our state needs.

Two of the key players are Joint Finance Co-Chairs, Representative Mark Pocan of Madison and Senator Mark Miller of Monona. There is a small glimmer of hope, a hint of some backbone, in their recent statements.

The Capital Times recently reported:

Budget committee co-chairman Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Madison, said he wouldn’t rule out any measure to close the shortfall, including the measures proposed by Doyle and possible additional tax increases.

WisPolitics.com quotes Miller saying similar things:

Miller said that there’s only so deep you can cut to programs at a time state residents are struggling and that all avenues should be open, “including the need to look at perhaps revenue increases.”

Miller also said he would “like to look at closing more tax loopholes that remain.” Unfortunately, “he does not anticipate Dem lawmakers proposing an across-the-board sales tax increase.” If you think this or other revenue options are viable ideas, let Pocan and Miller and all the state officials know how you feel.

The WisPolitics.com story also quotes GOP Representative Robin Vos, as saying “he doesn’t think Democrats ‘have the wherewithal’ to make the tough choices necessary to cut spending and balance the budget without raising taxes.”

Vos gets it wrong. In this political climate, it doesn’t take much backbone to cut programs and layoff workers. What takes real courage is to change the conversation and the dynamic, to proudly raise the taxes that need raising, compassionately provide for the people who are suffering and wisely invest in the things like education which will assure a prosperous future for Wisconsin. That takes backbone and heart.

I hope our state officials find that backbone and that heart. You can help by reminding them of what needs to be done. Only they can answer the quiz at the top.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Education Reporting: A Suicide Watch?

Declining-Newspaper-Readership

It is not a news flash to say that the decline in the health of American journalism is currently close to a death spiral. In a wonderfully succinct review of the current state of play for the industry in Frank Rich’s column today, he noted the many challenges that have been faced by the varied mediums throughout the 20th century, right up to the present. It’s well worth a read. But unlike the entertainment media who have had their successes at reviving their fortunes with the introduction of new technologies – and failures, he noted, “with all due respect to show business, it’s only journalism that’s essential to a functioning democracy. And it’s not just because — as we keep being tediously reminded — Thomas Jefferson said so.”

Rich goes on to write:

Yes, journalists have made tons of mistakes and always will. But without their enterprise, to take a few representative recent examples, we would not have known about the wretched conditions for our veterans at Walter Reed, the government’s warrantless wiretapping, the scams at Enron or steroids in baseball.

Such news gathering is not to be confused with opinion writing or bloviating — including that practiced here. Opinions can be stimulating and, for the audiences at Fox News and MSNBC, cathartic. We can spend hours surfing the posts of bloggers we like or despise, some of them gems, even as we might be moved to write our own blogs about local restaurants or the government documents we obsessively study online.

But opinions, however insightful or provocative and whether expressed online or in print or in prime time, are cheap. Reporting the news can be expensive. Some of it — monitoring the local school board, say — can and is being done by voluntary “citizen journalists” with time on their hands, integrity and a Web site.

I guess he would be referring to me, but not sure about the time issue.

He goes on to say that opinion is still no substitute for reporting, such as what is happening in Pakistan, Washington or Wall Street — and our local school board. I noted earlier that there was no reporting on the school finance hearing that recently took place at the capital. Nor was there any local newspaper reporting on our recent school budget decisions for next year. I’ve been told that a short TV piece aired on a 10 o’clock broadcast (update: WKOW, includes video, h/t JW) — hardly a sufficient exercise in enfranchising our community with the knowledge of how one of the largest portions of their tax money is being spent. In fact, at the moment, the Board of Education web site is even down, ironically. The latest lack of coverage by our local media about the budget deliberations, especially print, with it’s ability to dig a little deeper on issues, is a sad development. With newspaper management fixated on moving around reporters to new beats on a regular basis (from a long out-of-date model), just has they have gotten up to speed on a complex subject such as education, is indeed beyond stupid. Just because conflict has been and remains a driver of much American journalism, it does not mean that there isn’t some important education reporting that needs to be done at the moment.

Blogs, such as this one, are a woefully inadequate substitute to good reporting, one in which telephone calls to sources are made, meetings attended and then a report distributed in a medium large enough to reach a mass audience. Count me as another person who is concerned about these latest developments. What is the current thinking of the editors at the WSJ and the Cap Times?

Robert Godfrey

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Filed under Accountability, AMPS, Best Practices, Budget, education, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, Quote of the Day, School Finance, Take Action

Save the Date – Walk on the Child’s Side 10th Anniversary School Funding Action!

sign1

On June 16, 2009 at 11:00 AM, concerned citizens from around Wisconsin will gather at Library Mall on the UW-Madison campus and March to the State Capitol, bringing a message that comprehensive school funding reform cannot wait.

The event marks the tenth anniversary on the original “Walk on the Child’s Side.”  In 1999 and subsequent years, Price County Citizen’s Who CARE (Committee for Alternative Revenues for Education) and their allies walked hundreds of miles from Northern Wisconsin to Madison, spreading the message that Wisconsin’s broken school funding system needs to be fixed (more history and information here).

After 10 additional years of cuts to our children’s educational opportunities, the need for a fix is greater than ever!

This message needs to be heard.  Join the “Walk on the Child’s Side” veterans and newcomers to the struggle on June 16 and be part of the movement for change.

All the info is on this flier (click on the image for a pdf to print, post and share):

walk-flier-final-draft

The event is sponsored by Price County Citizens who CARE, The Northern Tier Uniserve, and the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (check their web sites and on AMPS for updates).

You can RSVP via Facebook.

Save the date and spread the word!

Thomas J. Mertz

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May Day in Madison

Click on image for pdf.

Click on image for pdf.

The Chi-Lites, “(For God’s Sake) You’ve Got to Give More Power to the People” (Click to listen).

Among the demands of the Madison May Day March is “Real funding for public schools.”  I’m scheduled to speak on that topic.  That may change, but no matter what, I’ll be there to show support for this and other needed actions.  Join me and hundreds or thousands of others working for positive progressive change.

Here is the schedule (more details by clicking the above links).

11:00 a.m. Gathering at Brittingham Park
11:45 p.m. Depart Park to the Capitol
12:00 p.m. Capitol event, to state and federal demands
12:30 p.m. Depart Capitol to City-County Building
12:45 p.m. City-County event, to address city and county demands

Any Madison Metropolitan School District students planning to attend should provide written permission for their absences prior to Friday.

Thomas J. Mertz

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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

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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

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Hit Again (again and again…)

3_21_captain_america

Wisconsin may have dodged the bullet of privatizers in our State Superintendent election, but at the national level the for profit, not the public crowd are going forth with guns blazing.  President Obama, Arne Duncan and their crew are showing themselves to be,  in the words of  Diane Ravitch, “Margaret Spellings in Drag.”

Their latest hire fits the profile.  Education Week is reporting and the the Department of Education site confirms the Broad trained,  former edu-preneur with LearnNow, most recently Bill “Money Talks” Gates bag man, James Shelton III (scroll here for a bio)  is the new head of the Office of Innovation and Improvement.

I guess for at least the next four years “innovation” will continue to mean privatization and profit-seeking and improvement will continue to defined by the Ministry of Truth.

In history, one school of thought holds that industrialists and capitalists came to welcome expanded government when they realized they could “capture” the boards and departments and use them for their own ends.   Think of the fox guarding the hen house.  The Obama crew are not liberators, just a changing of the guard.

As Deborah Meir recently wrote about the mindset that is at work in the corridors of power:

Some combination of Harvard and Wall Street smarts are seen as all-purpose disinterested expertise, fit for any purpose. The master key. While disregard of educators has a long history, and demonizing of teacher organizations is hardly new, it has reached new heights. A mere 20 years ago one could not imagine school systems would be run by people who never practiced or studied schooling or education. The assumption that “smarts” based on hands-on knowledge is valuable has lost its historic place in our view of reality. Law and business and finance smarts have ruled the day for this generation. At a cost. And not just in schools….

Our schools and our economy—and, above all, our democracy—require us to restore the balance.

The Obama permanent campaign will be holding listening sessions in Wisconsin.  It might be worth trying to get in a good word for public education by and for the people, not profit.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under Accountability, Arne Duncan, Best Practices, education, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, National News, nclb, No Child Left Behind, Take Action, Uncategorized

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

 

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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

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